Scorpio maurus?

XOskeletonRED

Arachnodemon
Old Timer
Joined
Jan 6, 2003
Messages
707
If it is, it would be Scorpio maurus palmatus. The photo I have is nearly exact to the one you posted. The prosoma appears to be slightly more granulated in your specimen, but it could be just the depth perception I have of it because the distance the pic was taken, being slightly farther away on the pic I have on the comp. If it's not, it could be an Opisto, but it is most likely a Scorpio, indeed. That's probably where they got the idea that it was. Someone actually knew where it was collected. Oddly. heheh... Great looking scorp, Paul!


adios,
edw. :D
 

phoenixxavierre

Arachnoprince
Old Timer
Joined
Oct 9, 2002
Messages
1,293
I'll try to get some better pics posted. That one has a lot of sheen on it.

Thanks, Ed!

Take care,

Paul
 

XOskeletonRED

Arachnodemon
Old Timer
Joined
Jan 6, 2003
Messages
707
Paul,

Though it does have some glare on the scorp, the pic is still quite distinguishable as to having the exact coloration of the pics I have of S. maurus. The pics I have aren't as good as yours because they were taken from a little farther away than I prefer them to be from. Annoyingly. Other than the slight granulation differences I believe I see in the prosomas, they are identical.



adios,
edw. :D

y/w
Edit: will attempt to cross-reference it with some of the other pics I have of S. maurus and see what I can come up with.
 

Baphomet

Arachnosquire
Old Timer
Joined
Feb 22, 2003
Messages
65
Paul,

I would have to concur with XO that what you have is more than likely a Scorpio maurus fuscus. I have a photo almost identical to the one you posted, showing the same granulation of the prosomas.

Nice specimen!
 

XOskeletonRED

Arachnodemon
Old Timer
Joined
Jan 6, 2003
Messages
707
Baphomet,

You have a pic of the fuscus ssp? Did they ever post one to the Scorpion Files? I've been attempting to obtain one, but with little success.


adios,
edw. =D
 

phoenixxavierre

Arachnoprince
Old Timer
Joined
Oct 9, 2002
Messages
1,293
Baphomet,

Thanks!

Edw.,

Thankyou as well!

All,

This pic was taken through glass. Not very good but best I can do at the moment. I'll post a better one soon if I can.

Take care,

Paul
 

Attachments

skinheaddave

SkorpionSkin
Arachnosupporter +
Joined
Aug 15, 2002
Messages
4,341

phoenixxavierre

Arachnoprince
Old Timer
Joined
Oct 9, 2002
Messages
1,293
so does that make it a color morph of S. maurus? or Opistophthalmus?

Paul
 
Last edited:

Baphomet

Arachnosquire
Old Timer
Joined
Feb 22, 2003
Messages
65
Originally posted by XOskeletonRED
Baphomet,

You have a pic of the fuscus ssp? Did they ever post one to the Scorpion Files? I've been attempting to obtain one, but with little success.


adios,
edw. =D
Yes, I have several photos of fuscus...I got them from an aquaintance of mine (Kari J. McWest). Kari has been kind enough to send me many high-quality photos of scorps.

I have known Kari for quite some time, and I am currently assisting him in collecting and cataloging local scorps from California. Actually, I collect them, and make notes of where they were captured with the help of a GPS. I then ship the scorp and the info to Kari.

Kari is kind enough to share his results with me in return.

Anyway, I'm not sure about Scorpion Files' photo library regarding fuscus, but by the looks of Dave's reply, they do indeed have some posted now.
 

XOskeletonRED

Arachnodemon
Old Timer
Joined
Jan 6, 2003
Messages
707
Most excellent, guys. Thank you both. Been a little while since I got to visit the Scorpion Files.
Paul, I'd have to again concur on my original reply as the fuscus doesn't match up in these pics, as Dave has kindly stated.

EDIT: After further inspection of my own O. ecristatus female specimen, I'm head strong that it's not an Opistiophthalmus genus scorpion, though the coloration and appearance is very close to that of my Opistos. The Opistos have extremely lighter coloration on the frontal section of the prosoma, whereas the Scorpio maurus I had mentioned earlier, does not have such the extremity, and rather, comes close to staying the same color throughout. Also, the pedipalps shaping isn't all in the exact same angles, femurs being of different lengths in retrospect to tergite size, so it's not ecristatus (that being the only Opisto. at all, that I could find with such extreme similarities). All others have definite "givens" on coloration (also keeping note of color morphs, it's too far off in variation) . I'll also bet you have males and females and the pedipalp size wont differentiate as much as Opistos will.

adios,
edw. :D
 
Last edited:

phoenixxavierre

Arachnoprince
Old Timer
Joined
Oct 9, 2002
Messages
1,293
Originally posted by XOskeletonRED
Paul, I'd have to again concur on my original reply as the fuscus doesn't match up in these pics, as Dave has kindly stated.

EDIT: After further inspection of my own O. ecristatus female specimen, I'm head strong that it's not an Opistiophthalmus genus scorpion, though the coloration and appearance is very close to that of my Opistos. The Opistos have extremely lighter coloration on the frontal section of the prosoma, whereas the Scorpio maurus I had mentioned earlier, does not have such the extremity, and rather, comes close to staying the same color throughout. Also, the pedipalps shaping isn't all in the exact same angles, femurs being of different lengths in retrospect to tergite size, so it's not ecristatus (that being the only Opisto. at all, that I could find with such extreme similarities). All others have definite "givens" on coloration (also keeping note of color morphs, it's too far off in variation) . I'll also bet you have males and females and the pedipalp size wont differentiate as much as Opistos will.

adios,
edw. :D

Here's a few more pics for ya.

Paul
 

phoenixxavierre

Arachnoprince
Old Timer
Joined
Oct 9, 2002
Messages
1,293
I had a shipment of these come in and nearly all of them died within the first few days of receipt.

Here is what the male I had looked like with a female beside him for comparison.

Take care,

Paul
 
Last edited:

phoenixxavierre

Arachnoprince
Old Timer
Joined
Oct 9, 2002
Messages
1,293
Hi all,

Todd Gearheart has these listed as Scorpio maurus dark form, and states they're from Northern Africa.

Has this color morph been studied at all? Anyone know if they're structurally identical? Or are these a first time show in the US?

I was comparing the O. wahlbergi/boemi I have with the S. maurus dark form, and noticed the eye placement in the S. maurus is more toward the center of the (what is that area between the chelicerae and the abdomen area called? lol!) head area, whereas the Opistos had eyes set farther away from the chelicerae. However, I noticed on one or two Opistos where the eye placement is not the same, being more toward the middle of the head. Make sense?

:D

I'll take and post pics of what I'm talking about when I get time.


Best wishes,

Paul
 

XOskeletonRED

Arachnodemon
Old Timer
Joined
Jan 6, 2003
Messages
707
Well, Paul,

Age differentiation could easily change the aspect of things on the overall size of the peds, because in many Ts, the females live considerably longer than males, as the same goes with most scorpions (probably all). It actually goes with people as well, if you think about it (makes me kinda wonder if it does on all living creatures). As far as the appearance of the two go, the female's peds are not as overly bulky, or as granulated as the male's in comparison to their own bodies, unlike Opisto, females having the bulkier peds and being more granulated. I'll have to say, I'm 100% positive it's not Opisto genus after looking closer as the two together. I know Scorpio males have the slightly bulkier peds, so indeed, the male, in the instance of your pic with them together, is the one of the left and female is the one on the right. The female only appears to have larger peds because she is obviously much older. My overall judgement: They are Scorpio maurus.

Great pics, Paul!


adios,
edw. =D

PS: hey, hook me up with an E-mail on those scorps, Paul. :D
 
Last edited:

Kugellager

ArachnoJester of the Ancient Ones
Arachnosupporter
Joined
Jul 24, 2002
Messages
2,363
Females living longer than males?...now that is a new to me. I believe that to be incorrect.

In my experience I have had more female scorps die before my male scorps ...particularly after they give birth. The males just kept right on living and even mated again after more than a year.

I have also never seen this stated in any text that I have read on the subject of sexual dimorphism or scorpion life-spans. In fact from what I have read is that both sexes in scorpions live about the same amount of time.

Tarantulas they are not.

John
];')
 

skinheaddave

SkorpionSkin
Arachnosupporter +
Joined
Aug 15, 2002
Messages
4,341
XO,

To compare the difference in longevity between the sexes in Ts and in scorpions (and humans, for that matter) is rediculous. The vastly different lifespans of male and female Ts is a direct result of their developmental processes. Furthermore, the gap is huge, with females lasting many times longer, sometimes as much as 10x as long.

On the other hand, both sexes of scorpions have similar longevities. Biologically, they both develop at similar rates, reach sexual maturity at similar times and cash in at similar times. Granted, the tendancy of males to give up their surface-minimalist lifestyle to find a mate does somewhat reduce their chances of reaching old age, but these effects, while significant, are small.

What we are talking about is two vastly different evolutionary pathways taken to sustain two vastly different population dynamics. That is why you don't see the same rate of sexual canabalism in scorpions (in fact, true sexual canabalism is considered rare to non-existant) as in Ts. That is even one of the reasons why scorpions can maintain K-selected populations without highly skewed sex ratios. We are talking about one of the primary factors in allowing scorpions to be succesful as they are. You ought to read "Scorpion Biology" by G.A. Polis. It discusses some of the significance of this life strategy.

Cheers,
Dave
 
Top