Wheel spider explained

The wheel spider or golden wheel spider (Carparachne aureoflava), is a huntsman spider native to the Namib Desert of Southern Africa. This spider is distinct from Leucorchestris arenicola, a spider sharing the same common name and found in the same locale.[1] The spider escapes parasitic pompilid wasps by flipping onto its side and cartwheeling down sand dunes at speeds of up to 44 turns per second.[2] [3]

Characteristics

Wheel spiders are up to 20 mm in size, with males and females the same size. The wheel spider does not make a web; it is a nocturnal, free-ranging hunter, coming out at night to prey on insects and other small invertebrates. Its bite is mildly venomous, but the spider is not known to be harmful to humans.[4]

Its principal line of defence against predation is to bury itself in a silk-lined burrow extending 40–50 cm deep. During the process of digging its burrow, the spider can shift up to 10L of sand, 80,000 times its body weight. It is during the initial stages of building a burrow that the spider is vulnerable to pompilid wasps, which sting and paralyze the spider, then lay eggs in its body. If the spider is unable to fight off a wasp, and if it is on a sloped dune, it will use its rolling speed of 1m/s to escape.[5]

References

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Carparachne aureoflava . ZipcodeZoo.com . BayScience Foundation, Inc. . 2008-08-13 . 2009-01-21.
  2. Web site: The Desert is Alive . Living Desert Adventures . 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080927162539/http://www.living-desert-adventures.com . 2008-09-27 .
  3. Armstrong, S. . Fog, wind and heat - life in the Namib desert . 1725 . 14 July 1990 . New Scientist . 2008-10-11 .
  4. Book: Leroy , Astri . John Leroy . Spiders of Southern Africa . Struik Publishers . 2000 . . 81 . 1-86872-944-3 .
  5. News: Mark Gardiner . Feature Creature . . 3 . April 2005 . PDF .