My P. ornata sling just molted, and it pushed the molt out of it's burrow (it chose to web up a bunch of coir rather than staying out in the open where I can see it), but the abdomen is missing.
Is it possible that it may have some still stuck to it? (I mean, I think if it did, it would have higher priorities than pushing it's old exoskeleton out of the burrow). I just want to get a second opinion. I can't see the spider, and I don't want to bother it...
...I -really- don't want to bother it...even with welding gloves.
Also, I'll try to attach a pic of the molt. The legs, to me, look the wrong way 'round, but then again, the last T I owned was a mature G. rosea, and it only molted twice in my care.
Is it possible that it may have some still stuck to it? (I mean, I think if it did, it would have higher priorities than pushing it's old exoskeleton out of the burrow). I just want to get a second opinion. I can't see the spider, and I don't want to bother it...
...I -really- don't want to bother it...even with welding gloves.
Also, I'll try to attach a pic of the molt. The legs, to me, look the wrong way 'round, but then again, the last T I owned was a mature G. rosea, and it only molted twice in my care.