- Joined
- Aug 27, 2004
- Messages
- 861
I think T dealers can easily figure out whether someone is capable of caring for certain "hot" species, with some simple questions.
A. Medical significance is an opinion. B. Being 18 doesn't magically keep you from a larger reaction. C. All spiders are venomous. D. Check P. regalis bite reports. The latest bite was to a middle aged man who called 911! That is a ticking time bomb! 911 is a public service hot line that happens to be accessible by the media. It could have been aired and ruined our hobby. I have yet to hear of a child owner who called 911.Medically significant species should not be sold to underaged persons, who have, due to their age, a medical susceptibility toward many venoms; and who, due to their age, are not legally competent if an accident should occur.
Because: minors are more vulnerable to an envenomation, and so will incur both greater harm to themselves, and greater legal damages to the hobby if bitten/ stung, than if they were adult.
Many OW species are NOT medically significant. Pterinochilus, Eucratoscelus, Hysterocrates, Citharischius, Ceratogyrus, for instance. Venomous spiders should be kept by those who are physically less at risk, and legally less of a time-bomb for our hobby.
The one thing all thos threads had in common is that the escapee didn't leave that room. I have yet to hear of an unattended baby in a T room. Most unattended babies are confined in a strooler or a crib. It is far fetched that out of all places a T would end up there. It would have to be arboreal and a super rare fluke. A scorp or pede wouldn't have a chance at climbing to the child. It takes an unbelievable fluke and a stupid/abusive/neglectful parent for anything close to that senerio. The pede bitten girl lived in natural range.Really with all of the "Oh NO! my T escaped" threads it really is just a matter of time. before some ones small child has an encounter of the venomous kind. Heck even I had 2 Haplos loose a the same time for about 24-32 hrs in a room off of my garage. It is not a matter of if it will happen, it is a matter of when.
the problem with the maturity logic is: who is the judge of maturity? i agree that there are mature kids and immature adults, but legally, how do we define maturity? is there some sort of test? maturity is subjective, but age is not. age may not be the most sufficient manner, but it is legally the most efficient thing we have to help protect us.
you worded my thoughts precisely!!I don't think which age, size or health of human is best to handle a pokie bite, or care for one is the main concern here.
Who is responsible when something goes terribly wrong? (many other possibilities), and how do we keep this growing hobby we all enjoy from a quick political halt by selling "hots" to anyone with enough cash.
Do you have any references?Many OW species are NOT medically significant. Pterinochilus, Eucratoscelus, Hysterocrates, Citharischius, Ceratogyrus, for instance. Venomous spiders should be kept by those who are physically less at risk, and legally less of a time-bomb for our hobby.
who says the T has to come to the baby. Most likely it would be the baby coming to the T.The one thing all thos threads had in common is that the escapee didn't leave that room. I have yet to hear of an unattended baby in a T room. Most unattended babies are confined in a strooler or a crib. It is far fetched that out of all places a T would end up there. It would have to be arboreal and a super rare fluke. A scorp or pede wouldn't have a chance at climbing to the child. It takes an unbelievable fluke and a stupid/abusive/neglectful parent for anything close to that senerio. The pede bitten girl lived in natural range.
TBH
Can u plz tell that in other words ? x)Hello all,
First of all, sorry if I seem I'm trying to hijack the thread, I'm just curious.
Do you have any references?
There was an article published in Toxicon a few years back, about tarantula venom-- one of the figures: "the time to death (min) after ICV injection with 0.1 µL of crude venom in mice". Of the tested African species, Citharischius crawshayi and Hysterocrates sp. "hercules" 'finished' in the top three (along with the infamous Stromatopelma calceatum).
- Escoubas, P. & Rash, L. 2004. Tarantulas: eight-legged pharmacists and combinatorial chemists Toxicon Volume 43, Issue 5, pp. 555-574
isn't it the same test that g. rosea had some best scores in? I think I remember someone mentioning it was one of the shortest death-times.
- Escoubas, P. & Rash, L. 2004. Tarantulas: eight-legged pharmacists and combinatorial chemists Toxicon Volume 43, Issue 5, pp. 555-574
Ps.: Tiago, in other words, they measured the time it took the mice to die from the tarantulas' venom. Thus logically, the shorter amount of time it takes for a mouse to die --> stronger is the venom. Strong venom = mouse dies fast; less strong venom = mouse dies slower.
It basically means that some people did a test in mice where they put a certain amount of T venom in the mouse, and saw how long it took the mouse to die. If a mouse injected with venom from a OBT died faster than a mouse injected with H. gigas venom, the OBT venom is more potentCan u plz tell that in other words ? x)
Tkz in advance,
//Tiago