lizardminion
Arachnolord
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2011
- Messages
- 626
I'm interested in obtaining a few. What is the largest species I can find for sale?
I agree venomous spiders should only be sold responsibly.Sicarius spp. are available from select dealers and certain members of this site. But, they don't sell to just anyone. You need to be of mature years and experience to be allowed to buy one, and sign a waiver also. They often aren't advertised because if you don't already know who has them, you aren't the right kind of person to be buying them anyway.
Seems like that's how it always is, isn't it? You see something for sale all over the place or you see it at a reasonable price when you're not looking for it, but the time comes when you're actually interested in trying to get your hands on something and it's impossible to pin down... feel the same about the giant peruvian centipedes...Some years back they were available from some sites, and could find them for sale in the classified's here. At the time, I wasn't interested, but I'd love to find some now. My guess is that they are just not available right now as WC, and nobody has or is successfully breeding them.
Black widows are traded all the time without much prying into the competency of the buyer. I really wouldn't consider Sicarius sp. to be much more dangerous. Necrosis is always blown way out of proportion. 2.5 cm (about 1 inch) in diameter would be considered a large necrotic lesion inflicted by this spider, brown recluse dermal necrosis, often being less then half that size. Now, the venom is capable of causing other systemic problems, but really, how much more dangerous is this spider compared to widows for example?I've never been to Australia so I'm not sure, how prevalent are the funnelwebs there? Can they be found easily by pretty much anyone? At least with Sicarius they live in the middle of nowhere right? It's gotta be harder to regulate capture and sale of species that are native to the country you live in, especially if they aren't all too rare.
I've not heard of them being aggressive, fast yes. I'm not sure if I feel the same about speed being a factor that elevates risk all that much when the spider is in the hands of someone who knows its speed and venom. I have np with giant house spiders, and I know their faster. Once you understand the animal, all you need do is manage it based on that understanding. I know black widows are clumsy, so I factor that in when taking care of one. If I know sand spiders are fast, I would factor that in when taking care of one as well.the Sic's i have seen in real life are way WAY quicker than any Latro i have ever seen. granted, neither can climb vertical glass, iirc... but i don't find Sic and Latro to be all that comparable in risk at all. Latros limp along when they are not in their web, and aren't all that much quicker when they are in their web. Most of the commonly kept Latro species are not that inclined to bite... Sic's are very much an unknown in that regard as people don't free handle them that much at all
Maybe I'm being dismissive, maybe not.you're being far too dismissive, imo. i've seen pics of my friends' Sics attacking paint brushes. i don't think there have been enough keepers with enough experience to conclusively say the Sics aren't aggressive. i've seen them go pretty spastic before when they can't hide. because the Sics tend to live in the superboonies there really hasn't been a huge amount of interaction with humans and not much study at all. these very well could be around as bad as people seem to think brown recluses are. Sic venom is much more aggressive than Loxosceles reclusa venom... more aggressive than L. leata, iirc.
so, to sum up my position... we have spiders, Sicarius, that we know are VERY fast, we don't know the average temperament of, and that we don't have a good amount of data to predict their actual effect on human tissues, and no antivenom for... compared to Latro's that we know are fairly slow, we know are very retiring, that we have decades and hundreds if not thousands of records of, and which we have ample supplies of antivenom for AND well established treatment regimens. that seems to be two wildly different situations to me
I value the knowledge of the people here more than I value Google's ability to find things.let's feed the word "Sicarius" to Google scholar: :sarcasm: