G. Rosea with white mouth and limb weakness

Georgia B

Arachnosquire
Joined
Sep 3, 2017
Messages
64
IMG_0443.JPG Hi all, I have been finding your good advice when I do google searches, but now I have signed up so I can post my own question. I think I'll like it here.

Anyway, I have a sick baby. I got Aragog, my G. rosea, 3 years ago at a reptile show. At the time I was told that he was a not yet sexually mature male. However, he does have hooks, and the clubbiness of his pedipalps is up for interpretation. Not like a boxing glove, as I have heard described, but still wider at the tips than the base. He has not molted in the three years that I have had him.

Anyway, lately he has not been eating. I thought he was finally in premolt. But today I noticed that he was moving with two legs dragging on the ground. His abdomen is noticeably smaller and I think his legs are skinnier too. When I picked him up to have a closer look, he managed to get all eight legs moving again but not strongly. The scariest thing is that when I looked at his mouth, it is all covered with white. I tried to swab the white, but it was hard and did not come off. I tried to drip water into his mouth, but it beaded up and did not seem to sink in. (I keep his water dish full.)

Could this be a symptom of old age? Does he have a mold or parasite? I keep his cage dry except for the water in the dish. He is currently in an ICU. But if he's dying for sure, I don't want to prolong the agony. If it was something I did wrong I would be heartbroken... it's already hard watching such a beloved little creature ailing.

Anyway, I'm sure I'm not the first to post such symptoms so thanks for your patience. I'm going to try and post a picture here, he is in a plastic kid's cup if you wonder why it's all yellow. Thanks in advance for any advice.
 

ediblepain

Arachnosquire
Joined
Dec 24, 2016
Messages
98
H! Welcome to the boards. I have no idea about the white mouth stuff. If your G rosea has hooks, it is a mature male. It's actually pretty impressive it's lived this long, as most mature males have short life spans. ICU will probably do more harm than good as this is a desert dweller (unless he is super dehydrated. But I'm not 100% sure on this). Most likely this is just the end of his life, and not a disease or parasite. Hopefully another member will have better answers/advice for you. Good luck.
 

Tim Benzedrine

Prankster Possum
Old Timer
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Apr 4, 2004
Messages
1,497
Did he have hooks when you bought him?. He had to have had them if he has not moulted since then. As was pointed out above, that's a pretty good run for a mature male. Somebody else will have to comment on whether or not that is common, I never had a G. porteri make it nearly that long after hooking out, myself, but I've only owned three, two were male, the last was female which I had for 13 years. So yeah, his time has probably just about run out as suggested in the post above. Try not to be too upset, when it comes to males, it is the name of he game, unfortunately. Thatt is why that females are sought after, generally speaking.
I do not know about the white appearance though, but given the spider's age there may be no connection.
 

boina

Lady of the mites
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Joined
Mar 25, 2015
Messages
2,217
The pedipalp I can see in the pic defintely does NOT look like a mature male. However, it does look like a very scruffy spider in bad shape. Thie white stuff is really worrisome. The only white stuff around the mouth I know off are mites, but they look different and are defintely not hard and should have popped up before now - after all you have it 3 years already. Dragging two legs either points to severe dehydration or neurological problems. It could be severe dehydration because it can't drink with this stuff around it's mouth.

I would make a more determined attempt to get the white stuff off. Spider hair is strongly hydrophobic, so it's normal that the water you drop on will just pearl off. Maybe some careful rubbing with a wet Q-tip will help?
 

The Grym Reaper

Arachnoreaper
Joined
Jul 19, 2016
Messages
4,831
The only white stuff around the mouth I know off are mites
Severe nematode infection would lead to white gunk around the mouth parts but it'd be soupy and wouldn't have spread that far from the orifice.

It could just be encrusted poop, I keep seeing mentions of it in relation to white stuff around the mouth but I have no idea if they actually ever attempt to eat their own faeces.
 
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spotropaicsav

Arachnobaron
Joined
Apr 3, 2017
Messages
431
View attachment 251092 Hi all, I have been finding your good advice when I do google searches, but now I have signed up so I can post my own question. I think I'll like it here.

Anyway, I have a sick baby. I got Aragog, my G. rosea, 3 years ago at a reptile show. At the time I was told that he was a not yet sexually mature male. However, he does have hooks, and the clubbiness of his pedipalps is up for interpretation. Not like a boxing glove, as I have heard described, but still wider at the tips than the base. He has not molted in the three years that I have had him.

Anyway, lately he has not been eating. I thought he was finally in premolt. But today I noticed that he was moving with two legs dragging on the ground. His abdomen is noticeably smaller and I think his legs are skinnier too. When I picked him up to have a closer look, he managed to get all eight legs moving again but not strongly. The scariest thing is that when I looked at his mouth, it is all covered with white. I tried to swab the white, but it was hard and did not come off. I tried to drip water into his mouth, but it beaded up and did not seem to sink in. (I keep his water dish full.)

Could this be a symptom of old age? Does he have a mold or parasite? I keep his cage dry except for the water in the dish. He is currently in an ICU. But if he's dying for sure, I don't want to prolong the agony. If it was something I did wrong I would be heartbroken... it's already hard watching such a beloved little creature ailing.

Anyway, I'm sure I'm not the first to post such symptoms so thanks for your patience. I'm going to try and post a picture here, he is in a plastic kid's cup if you wonder why it's all yellow. Thanks in advance for any advice.
If you post another pic would it be possible to get a closer picture of your Ts mouth, could be helpful
 

Georgia B

Arachnosquire
Joined
Sep 3, 2017
Messages
64
IMG_0451.JPG IMG_0447.JPG IMG_0448.JPG IMG_0449.JPG Thanks everybody for your time. I left him overnight in the ICU but this morning he was expired. I will post some pictures for interest's sake. I'm doing my best with my iPhone camera and a digital microscope.

Pic 1: You can see his mouth and hooks. The white is dry and crusty. There's also a spot of white on the end of one pedipalp.
Pic 2: microscope view of mouth.
Pic 3: microscope view of of hook
Pic 4: microscope view of pedipalp
(Just to confirm he was indeed a mature male?)

I acquired him in May 2014 at the Calgary reptile show. He died today, Sept 2017. They told me at the show that he was not yet mature, but maybe he's just not well endowed so it wasn't obvious? I know 3 years is an exceptionally long time for a mature male to live. I kind of underfed him, one cricket a week or less, if that makes a difference.
 

sdsnybny

Arachnogeek
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Apr 29, 2015
Messages
1,330
G. porteri have indeed gone 3 years past ultimate molt many times. Some have even made it through a 2nd post ultimate molt although they lose their manly parts in the process. Your T was indeed a MM when you got him the seller either lied to you or wasn't aware of it. (hard to believe). Sorry you lost him but that was a long time for a MM.
 

Grace Cannell

Arachnosquire
Joined
Aug 19, 2017
Messages
63
I am sorry you lost him, I have no idea what the white stuff is but if he is a MM then try not to beat yourself up about it.
 

Georgia B

Arachnosquire
Joined
Sep 3, 2017
Messages
64
G. porteri have indeed gone 3 years past ultimate molt many times. Some have even made it through a 2nd post ultimate molt although they lose their manly parts in the process. Your T was indeed a MM when you got him the seller either lied to you or wasn't aware of it. (hard to believe). Sorry you lost him but that was a long time for a MM.
Thanks. He's actually a G. rosea. Anyway, yeah he was a really pleasant little fellow who helped many people overcome their prejudices and pushed me deeper into the hobby. I think I might actually try to preserve him.
 

ediblepain

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Joined
Dec 24, 2016
Messages
98
Thanks. He's actually a G. rosea. Anyway, yeah he was a really pleasant little fellow who helped many people overcome their prejudices and pushed me deeper into the hobby. I think I might actually try to preserve him.
G rosea are red in color.
 

miss moxie

Arachnoprince
Joined
Jun 13, 2014
Messages
1,804
Thanks. He's actually a G. rosea. Anyway, yeah he was a really pleasant little fellow who helped many people overcome their prejudices and pushed me deeper into the hobby. I think I might actually try to preserve him.
Yep, common mistake. G. rosea and G. porteri used to be pretty much synonymous to people but G. porteri has that grey and pink color scheme where as G. rosea look like:



[ Image Source ]
 

miss moxie

Arachnoprince
Joined
Jun 13, 2014
Messages
1,804
Wha???? Mind blown. So what is the common name of G. porteri?
Chilean rose hair.

And that's why we use scientific names here lol
+1 they're both called Chilean Rose Hair. Sometimes the G. rosea is called "Chilean Rose Hair RCF (Red Color Form)" but yeah that's why things get confusing quickly. Not to mention how many "bird eater" common names there are. It can be a pain remembering and correctly spelling the scientific name (Here's to looking at you Chromatopelma cyaneopubescens), but worth it. Practice makes perfect.
 

DadsGlasses

Arachnosquire
Joined
Sep 2, 2017
Messages
60
I'm sorry that you lost your tarantula. Thank you for taking such great post mortem pictures. Those were very helpful.
 

boina

Lady of the mites
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Mar 25, 2015
Messages
2,217
Ok, I'm officially blind. That's a mature male if I ever saw one. Please disregard my first post :banghead::bag:.
It's actually not that uncommon for a mature G. porteri/rosea to live this long. They are a very slow growing species and mature males often live several years. And no, you didn't underfeed him, you fed him just right.

Personally I think this 'MMs only have another year' is an underestimate. All my mature males lived more than a year. My male L. difficilis - a fast growing species, living on the fast lane - just died after 19 months, so I think for a slow G. porteri to live 3 years sounds about right.

Still, I'm sorry for your loss.

(Get a new tarantual as soon as possible ;))
 
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