agressive listing

yarndilwuck

Arachnopeon
Joined
Nov 27, 2010
Messages
11
Can i get somebody to rate these t's on defensiveness 1-10 one being docile and 10 being mean lil' T

Chilean Copper (P. scrofa)
Mexican Redrump (B. vagans)
Brazilian Salmon (L. parahybana)
Brazilian Red & White (N. chromatus)
Chilean Rose (G. rosea)
Usambar Orange Baboon (P. murinus)
Honduran Curlyhair (B. albopilosum)
Oklahoma Brown (A. hentzi)
Puerto Rican Pygmy (C. portoricae)
 
Last edited:

KoriTamashii

Arachnobaron
Old Timer
Joined
Nov 21, 2009
Messages
419
Why did you post this thread twice?

And T's aren't generally referred to as 'aggressive'. They're called 'defensive'.
 

Chris_Skeleton

Arachnoprince
Old Timer
Joined
Jan 31, 2010
Messages
1,309
From my experience:
Brazilian Salmon (L. parahybana) I have two, I give one a 3 and the other a 5.
Honduran Curlyhair (B. albopilosum) I also have two of these, I would say both are 2.
Chilean Rose (G. rosea) Also two of these, vary between a 2 and a 6 at any given time.

From reading on here:
Chilean Copper (P. scrofa) 1 to 2
Mexican Redrump (B. vagans) Varies
Brazilian Red & White (N. chromatus) No idea
Usambar Orange Baboon (P. murinus) 10+ lol
Oklahoma Brown (A. hentzi) Typically docile
Puerto Rican Pygmy (C. portoricae) No idea

These are just guesses on my part through experience and reading (what I would rate them as), and each individual withtin the species will vary.
 

KvMccur

Arachnopeon
Joined
Dec 4, 2010
Messages
9
The only spider you listed with medically significant venom is the Usambara Baboon. They are fast, defensive and aggressive, as most African species are. The rest are fairly docile, but most of these have urticating hairs and should rarely be handeled unless necessary to do so, as with all spiders.
 
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