Do pet tarantulas grow to "love" or become "fond" of you?
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No, but they're objectively the best pet.
Basically a walking plant who's bffs with a hole in the ground and hunts crickets by staying absolutely still until it's not....objectively...
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I don't know what you mean
Yes you do and you like it
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They show behavior that can’t be explained by simple automatisms
This has been long debunked and is also obvious to anyone that even dabbled in Entomology or adjacent fields. There are certainly very complex behaviors at work. But if it qualifies as sentient is a philosophical debate and not one of arachnology.
Only to people that think the mind is mystical and not biological in nature.
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The spiders are not insects, but in a war they would side with the insects.
I think they'd try to sell both sides weapons tbh
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...objectively...
An objectively peer-reviewed hyperbole.
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Why dont they give aggression displays? Normally it would make evolutionary sense to try and scare threats off before you attack them
You sure about that?
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Tarantulas are insects ferchrissake... They have the nervous system of a guitar amplifier.
The oldest common ancestor between arachnids and insects lived in the water.
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and they would come at you
And they survived that encounter? As did your home? I assume the resulting fire would have taken both.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Feeding those took some real preperation. We first had to seal the room (closing an gaps at the doors/windows) as well as blocking all corners and cranies where they could potentially hide.
Then we stripped. Not kidding.
The first time feeding them one of them ran up my brothers arm and straight into his shirt. It was an absolute pain to get it out of there (and he totally got bitten in the process). From then on we'd take off all loose clothing when opening their enclosures. So yeah, just socks and tight fitting boxer briefs.
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Opening the terrarium was fine, lifting the little log hut thingy and messing up the web was a gamble.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Opening the terrarium was fine, lifting the little log hut thingy and messing up the web was a gamble.
Mine just loved to extend their web to include the door.
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Long anecdote short; no.
Short anecdote long; nooooo. I had a Selenocosmia Crassipes (from north-east QLD, Australia) for a year or so, and she never seemed to .. 'warm' to me.
I had to get her out in a cup regularly to change her substrate, and/or attempt to give 'pats' after a few beers, but she'd always rear-up to strike
But I was her cricket and pinky-mouse dealer!
I didn't research it. I don't have studies to cite. I didn't approach it constructively.
I just hoped one day we'd click, before going on adventures together.
I miss Fluffy.
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Feeding those took some real preperation. We first had to seal the room (closing an gaps at the doors/windows) as well as blocking all corners and cranies where they could potentially hide.
Then we stripped. Not kidding.
The first time feeding them one of them ran up my brothers arm and straight into his shirt. It was an absolute pain to get it out of there (and he totally got bitten in the process). From then on we'd take off all loose clothing when opening their enclosures. So yeah, just socks and tight fitting boxer briefs.
Sounds like the enclosure needed an airlock or something