Tarantula dehydrated/dying or molting?

crown703

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Hi I have a Goliath bird eater and for a few months she’s been doing fine. A little bit ago her movement slowed down a lot and then it stayed within the one spot and its legs started to curl. I added another water dish and sprayed the tank again and for 2 days she moved one time and it was to look in a different area. I took it out of its enclosure and now have it in a container with a damp napkin hoping that’ll help or get it to drink water if it’s dehydrated. In the photo it looks like it’s in terrible condition and truthfully dead but moved yesterday mid day and since that is hasn’t again
 

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Ratmosphere

Arachnoking
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Looks severely dehydrated and dead.

Post pics of the enclosure. Are you sure it was a female and not a mature male?
 
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crown703

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Truthfully it’s gender I’m not positive on and it’s enclosure is a 40 gallon tank with dirt and a hiding place as of now. Is there anything I can do rather than have it inside of the container with the paper towel?
 

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crown703

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Yesterday it was moving away from the water spot on the dirt but since then no I wouldn’t say there has been.
 

A guy

Arachnobaron
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Truthfully it’s gender I’m not positive on and it’s enclosure is a 40 gallon tank with dirt and a hiding place as of now. Is there anything I can do rather than have it inside of the container with the paper towel?
That looks extremely dry and unsuitable for a Theraphosa species which needs moist conditions to thrive.
 

crown703

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I normally spray it every other day. The water seems to dry somewhat fast. I haven’t sprayed it in 2 or 3 days when I saw the legs curling. I was adding a new water dish and started to pour some water near its mouth
 

A guy

Arachnobaron
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I normally spray it every other day. The water seems to dry somewhat fast. I haven’t sprayed it in 2 or 3 days when I saw the legs curling. I was adding a new water dish and started to pour some water near its mouth
Spraying is useless. It doesn't retain moisture. For moisture dependent species, you gotta literally pour water into the substrate.

I'd bet that it's that extremely dry condition is what killed it.
 

crown703

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Aright thank you. I was always told to spray the tarantulas enclosure never to pour water into the substrate
 

TheraMygale

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Aright thank you. I was always told to spray the tarantulas enclosure never to pour water into the substrate
im really pissed off that someone gave you bad advice.

is it dead?

if its not, and you have a smaller enclosure handy, make a new one with moist sub. NOT OVER SATURATED SUB. Basicaly, when you squeeze it, maybe one drop comes out.

by putting it in a new moist enclosure, smaller, it might have a chance.

thats such a gorgeous adult tarantula too. Its such a shame. Please come here FIRST in the futur. You will get solid advice.

send us more pics of whole body incase is might be a mature male, but youd have noticed this…

a picture will help us notice if it has some crookedness due to falling.

the advice you recieved sounds like someone from the 90s in a reptile shop 😪
 
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