JoeCapricorn
Arachnopeon
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2013
- Messages
- 4
A bit of backstory, Scarlet is a Mexican Red Rump tarantula that lives at Hershey Gardens and has been living there for seven years at least. Around 2022 she had symptoms resembling DKS, and she successfully molted around November of 2022. I was not around at the time to see this in person, but a video was recorded (which I don't have available at the moment but I could try and ask for it on Monday). I was hired in the summer of 2023, and she was still on the treatment regimen that they implemented for the apparent DKS. This was to have her under a red light during opening hours, then swapped with Rosie (our Chilean Rose darling) to be in the humid Chrysalis Cabinet at night. Autumn of 2023 she molted again, it went perfectly. The shed exuvia pinned in a display case is an excellent talking point for guests. She also clearly was strong again, so we no longer did the rotation and Rosie was thankful for the less vibrations.
She molted again and this time I recorded my very first tarantula molt timelapse! I posted the video to Entomemeology ( - it should be public)
Someone pointed out a lesion on her epigastric furrow. I'll post a picture of that below.
Then when I noticed her spood splooting I took a photo of her, and noticed that the separation between her abdomen and cephalothorax looked a bit odd. Neither lesion seems to be oozing hemolymph though. And today (or rather Friday since now it's 1:43am Saturday here), it was her first feeding attempt but she did not seem interested. I'm not worried about that though, I often see that with tarantulas that have long molting cycles, they need about three weeks to get their appetite back and sometimes longer and then they are utter chompmonsters!
Perhaps this is me being her designated hypochondriac, but what could these lesions be, and is there any treatment? Are they possibly age related? I've heard of using corn starch if there was oozing hemolymph. Veterinary care could also be a possibility as we take our animals to the same vet that ZooAmerica uses.
I should also note that she is display only. Scarlet is shy, so handling is kept at an absolute minimum. Before her molt the only time I held her was when I weighed her and the other tarantulas (she was 32 grams) back around November. The only tarantula that gets taken out for guests is Rosie and we have a protocol with her for her safety (Rosie doesn't get handled by guests, but she does high five them with one of her paws)
At some point I'll have to handle Scarlet again, when I do maintenance on her enclosure. She'll be weighed and I'll check underneath to see what the lesion looks like, and if the one up top got worse. I am also doing some reading about what that top one might be and it looks like the pedicle, so it might not be anything to worry about regardless. Still, the epigastric lesion is a concern as well. I adore this spider.
She molted again and this time I recorded my very first tarantula molt timelapse! I posted the video to Entomemeology ( - it should be public)
Someone pointed out a lesion on her epigastric furrow. I'll post a picture of that below.
Then when I noticed her spood splooting I took a photo of her, and noticed that the separation between her abdomen and cephalothorax looked a bit odd. Neither lesion seems to be oozing hemolymph though. And today (or rather Friday since now it's 1:43am Saturday here), it was her first feeding attempt but she did not seem interested. I'm not worried about that though, I often see that with tarantulas that have long molting cycles, they need about three weeks to get their appetite back and sometimes longer and then they are utter chompmonsters!
Perhaps this is me being her designated hypochondriac, but what could these lesions be, and is there any treatment? Are they possibly age related? I've heard of using corn starch if there was oozing hemolymph. Veterinary care could also be a possibility as we take our animals to the same vet that ZooAmerica uses.
I should also note that she is display only. Scarlet is shy, so handling is kept at an absolute minimum. Before her molt the only time I held her was when I weighed her and the other tarantulas (she was 32 grams) back around November. The only tarantula that gets taken out for guests is Rosie and we have a protocol with her for her safety (Rosie doesn't get handled by guests, but she does high five them with one of her paws)
At some point I'll have to handle Scarlet again, when I do maintenance on her enclosure. She'll be weighed and I'll check underneath to see what the lesion looks like, and if the one up top got worse. I am also doing some reading about what that top one might be and it looks like the pedicle, so it might not be anything to worry about regardless. Still, the epigastric lesion is a concern as well. I adore this spider.
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