I have a Stromatopelma calceatum and she "teleports" there's no other term that applies to the speed at which she moves about when she needs to.Nope, but I imagine the Taps would be top of the list. They jump off of stuff faster then Jet Li on the wrong train.
-Sean
I have a Stromatopelma calceatum and she "teleports" there's no other term that applies to the speed at which she moves about when she needs to.
i'd say that is not a bad ballpark figure at all!I've seen t's cover 6" in probably 1/8 second which is 4 feet per second. That's less than 4 mph. When your finger is 6" away from the burrow entrance that 4mph IS like light speed.
When you convert that to body lengths per second... Let's say 8 body lengths per second would be like a 6' man running at 33mph.
Nicely done. :worship:I've seen t's cover 6" in probably 1/8 second which is 4 feet per second. That's less than 4 mph. When your finger is 6" away from the burrow entrance that 4mph IS like light speed.
When you convert that to body lengths per second... Let's say 8 body lengths per second would be like a 6' man running at 33mph.
i can back that upThat makes less than 2 km/h
However, Solifugids have been measured at 16 km/h.
dude you dont know the half of it... have you ever turned a light on when an h. lividium is wandering it's cage?? it zooms in it's hole quicker than you can blink your eyes same thing with a p.murinusA book I have which has information on animal speeds puts large spiders at about 5 mph.
The explosiveness of their speed is what is impressive. I wonder how long it takes for them to reach top speed...almost certainly less than 1/10th of a second.
in a vacuum ...you have to say in a vacuum ...I believe that in the case of some species such as E. murinus, H. lividum, the infamous OBT and most poecilotheria it would be 186,000 miles per second, that being the speed of light.