All I know is, I'd hate to be the predator with a mouth full of T.blodi urticating hairs!In the new world, the average temperatures are lower. So instead of being lightening quick, tarantulas have developed to "taste bad" or have negative effects on the consumer which would ingest them.
:?
Complete shot in the dark.
Could it be that because the ambient temperatures in the old world areas are quite high (I'm sure there are exceptions) meaning that the tarantulas are more 'alert', have a higher metabolism, which means they can strike faster, move quicker, since they do not need to warm up their muscles.
In the new world, the average temperatures are lower. So instead of being lightening quick, tarantulas have developed to "taste bad" or have negative effects on the consumer which would ingest them.
:?
I agree.Why ask why nature is what it is beautiful and diverse.All I know is, I'd hate to be the predator with a mouth full of T.blodi urticating hairs!
That would be a neat discussion. I would nominate Holothele spp. as a probable candidate for their complete lack of urts and their similarities to OBTs. Holothele spp. stick out like the sore thumb for New Worlders IMO.In conversation with another keeper here in Canada, we discussed where these tarantula types may have split and we came up with the Ephebopus genus as the most probable candidate. Obviously, this is only theory but the the fact that Ephebopus specimens have a smaller amount of urticating barbs in an odd location (they have them on their chelicerae rather than their abdomens) coupled with the odd shaped front feet (shovel shaped - similar to Poecilotheria) make this a logical choice.
Don't psalmos lack the hairs altogether? And they seem very similar to pokies...That would be a neat discussion. I would nominate Holothele spp. as a probable candidate for their complete lack of urts and their similarities to OBTs. Holothele spp. stick out like the sore thumb for New Worlders IMO.
Yep. So do Tapinauchenius spp.Don't psalmos lack the hairs altogether? And they seem very similar to pokies...
Though India and S. America were never close together, so I don't know that really applies. Never mind
All members of the polyphyletic group referred to as the NW Ischnocolinae (Catumiri, Guyruita, Hemiercus, Holothele, Oligoxystre, Sickius) lack urticating setae, as do the 2 closely related NW genera already mentioned (Psalmopoeus, Tapinauchenius). You can't forget to include Ephebopus, which possess urticating setae on the pedipalps, not the abdomen, in this discussion.A couple other genera lack urticating hairs. Zoltan would know.![]()
I meant tarantula, sorry. :8ospiders evolved from tarantulas no?