Tarantulas in a closed bedroom with saltwater aquariums?

St Lou Bill

Arachnopeon
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Jun 20, 2023
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Hi,
Is it safe to keep tarantulas in a closed room with I a couple open top saltwater reef type aquariums?
I have had a couple of unexpected tarantula losses which is perplexing as I've been keeping T's for a long time. This round of T's I'm keep keeping in a different room. Just found my 2.5" B. Smithi in a curl.
 

fcat

Arachnoangel
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Jan 1, 2023
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Great question, I will ping the smartest person I know. @HooahArmy

I did Google "saltwater aquarium off gas" and a lot came up :( Get them out until someone smarter chimes in.

This doesn't necessarily apply to Ts but it does humans... You've probably heard of palytoxin? This guy poisoned his family with it, this link describes how

 
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A guy

Arachnodemon
Active Member
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Aug 8, 2020
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669
Will get one of these to sort the pesky fishes out.....
Theraphosidae sp. “Kingfisher”
🤣🤣🤣
And yes, they are real. Ha ha
These dealers are going wild with the names. Wanna get me a Theraphosinae sp. galactic ranger
 

vancwa

Arachnobaron
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Oct 3, 2011
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Providing pics of enclosure would allow us to better help you.
 

darkness975

Latrodectus
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Seems like every day another "health risk" is dug up related to pet keeping.
 

HooahArmy

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Jul 12, 2022
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267
Great question, I will ping the smartest person I know. @HooahArmy

I did Google "saltwater aquarium off gas" and a lot came up :( Get them out until someone smarter chimes in.

This doesn't necessarily apply to Ts but it does humans... You've probably heard of palytoxin? This guy poisoned his family with it, this link describes how

Bringing sexy back but lost the receipt... it's Hooah Army!
(Justin Timberlake song reference)

Thanks for the shout-out and pardon the time I had to spend at work this week.
What may or may not come out of a saltwater aquarium tank all depends on the size of the molecule of the chemical in specific. Salt, for example, is a large molecule and will stay behind and even form a crystal as water molecules nearby are evaporated out. However, there are many chemical additives to aquarium water that is on the smaller side and may leave with a bond with water molecules.
However, due to the concentration of the stuffs in the water and the monumental amount of concentration that may need to build in the air and eventually land on a surface to build into toxic amounts, the chemicals used in aquariums should pose very little hazard to pets... this from a scientific standpoint. Unless splashes of chemicals added are making their way to the T somehow, the T should be fine, so possible parasites, husbandry issues, or other troubles may be a more likely cause for the T's death.

Winter is the time when most people use central heating to keep their homes warm, with the air in general around many places being dryer than usual. Due to my own winter climate and the heat being used in my building, I've recorded my T-room humidity dropping as low as 20. In the past, that has proven fatal for my slings, so in the present, I tend to mist more in winter, keep more moist patches in the substrate, and keep water dishes up to the brim. I used to lose a lot of little guys due to me being less experinced back in the days; dryness is the only guess I can make about mysterious fall or winter T deaths.
 
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