Celebrating Africa's Giants
  • Home
  • About Us
  • GIRAFFE
  • ELEPHANT
  • RHINOCEROS
  • Wildebeest
  • Nature's Giants
    • Nature's Giants News

Nature's Giants News

The SPider king of africa

8/7/2018

5 Comments

 
The savannas of East Africa are famous as the home of big animals like lions, elephants, giraffes, hippos, and huge herds of wildebeest.
 
It is no surprise then that these savannas are the home to big spiders.  The King Baboon Spider (Pelinobius muticus) lives in burrows in the grasslands of Kenya and Tanzania.  It is a species of tarantula.
Picture
By Www.universoaracnido.com - Own work, CC BY-SA 2.5, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=13600599

Tarantulas are the kings of the spider world.  They are the largest known spiders that have ever lived.  The largest spider in the world is the goliath bird-eating tarantula of South America.  When its legs are spread out it can be one foot across, roughly the size of a young puppy.
 
King Baboon Spiders are not quite as big as their cousins in South America, but they can have a leg-span of 8 inches (20 cm).  This makes them possibly the largest spider in Africa.
 
The King Baboon Spider spends most of its time in its burrow dug into the savanna.  If you were a locust, worm, cricket, or mouse wandering by the burrow of this spider king though, LOOK OUT! 
 
This spider is known for its aggressive behavior.  It rears up on its hind legs, grabs its prey with its front legs and sinks its large fangs into its prey.  It repeatedly jerks its head up and down into its prey, stabbing it with its fangs and injecting venom.  The venom immobilizes the prey and liquefies its internal organs, making it easier for the King Baboon Spider to slurp up its meal.
 
King Baboon Spiders need to worry about not becoming meals themselves.  They are called baboon spiders because baboons like to eat them, as do many other birds, reptiles, and mammals of the savanna.  The King Baboon Spider will aggressively defend itself by hissing and rearing up and waving its arms in a threat display.  These spiders hiss by rubbing their first and second pairs of legs together.  This behavior is called stridulation and produces a hissing noise the same way a bow rubbing across a violin string does.
 
One last fact about the Spider King of Africa: the largest King Baboon Spiders are actually queens.  Female tarantulas are larger than male tarantulas.

Story by David Brown.
5 Comments
Keanu reeves
7/22/2022 10:19:51 pm

It is Keanu reeves

Reply
bentthomas link
3/7/2023 04:24:33 am

i am appreciate your article post. Good information for THE SPIDER KING OF AFRICA

Reply
Data Kitchen link
9/19/2023 06:26:41 pm

Great post, thanks.

Reply
Pete Dowling
11/22/2023 08:19:26 pm

Just asking a Kenyan friend in Australia. What is the biggest and deadliest spider in Kenya. He didn't remember the name until I showed him your image. Great article, many thanks.

Reply
Dana link
6/21/2024 11:57:58 pm

Awessome blog you have here

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    RSS Feed

Celebrating Africa's Giants

is a project of the Wild Nature Institute with our partners

Contact Us

  • Home
  • About Us
  • GIRAFFE
  • ELEPHANT
  • RHINOCEROS
  • Wildebeest
  • Nature's Giants
    • Nature's Giants News