photobuggirl
Arachnopeon
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2010
- Messages
- 30
This wild caught tarantula from central Utah has been my little friend for about 8 months. When I was cleaning his terrarium today I noticed he had some white stuff (I can only assume poop, since he hasn't molted in my care) stuck to his abdomen. After looking around on the forums, I saw a post to someone cleaning his G. Pulchra with a small paintbrush and warm water (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HFOkw3pQvLY). I spent about an hour and a half gently trying the same thing and it helped remove a good portion of the poop; I might have even been too gentle. I'm concerned though since it seems like too much of it is still stuck to him, but I really don't like the idea of hurting him by trying too hard to remove the crap. I'm not acting like an overly anxious mom, am I? I'm correct when I'm thinking that it's not common for other Ts have poopy bums, right?
Any additional advice to solve this problem?
Also, he seems to eat frequently. He only likes smaller crickets than I think a spider of his size should be eating, but he eats about 5 a week, on average. Could this be contributing to the poop overload?
In looking at my pictures, it also seems like he may be dehydrated (from what I've read from others' posts). I keep fresh water with him at all times and he comes from a dry climate, but is it possible that I need to rehabilitate?
I thought it was strange that as I was very lightly attempting to wipe the crap off, he would stick his butt up in the air, higher than I've ever seen any other spider. I had to get a picture of that too, since it was such a strange posture. (The picture displaying the strange posture is shot basically parallel to the surface the spider was standing on. I'm mentioning that just to help give you an idea that I didn't dramatize the look by tilting the camera. It's pretty difficult to tell with how white the ground is.)
I'm including (one) before and (four) after photos to give you an idea of what I'm talking about.
One more thing: I know this isn't the place for it, but if anyone who reads this post happens to have an idea of what kind of T this is, I'd love to hear of some guesses.
Also, he seems to eat frequently. He only likes smaller crickets than I think a spider of his size should be eating, but he eats about 5 a week, on average. Could this be contributing to the poop overload?
In looking at my pictures, it also seems like he may be dehydrated (from what I've read from others' posts). I keep fresh water with him at all times and he comes from a dry climate, but is it possible that I need to rehabilitate?
I thought it was strange that as I was very lightly attempting to wipe the crap off, he would stick his butt up in the air, higher than I've ever seen any other spider. I had to get a picture of that too, since it was such a strange posture. (The picture displaying the strange posture is shot basically parallel to the surface the spider was standing on. I'm mentioning that just to help give you an idea that I didn't dramatize the look by tilting the camera. It's pretty difficult to tell with how white the ground is.)
I'm including (one) before and (four) after photos to give you an idea of what I'm talking about.
One more thing: I know this isn't the place for it, but if anyone who reads this post happens to have an idea of what kind of T this is, I'd love to hear of some guesses.
Last edited: