Brazilian wandering spider

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Brazilian wandering spider
Phoneutria nigriventer
Phoneutria nigriventer
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Family: Ctenidae
Genus: Phoneutria
Perty, 1833
Diversity
8 species
Type species
Phoneutria fera
Perty, 1833
Species

P. bahiensis
P. boliviensis
P. eickstedtae
P. fera
P. keyserlingi
P. nigriventer
P. pertyi
P. reidyi

The Brazilian wandering spiders (Phoneutria spp.), Armed spiders ("aranhas armadeiras", as they are known in Portuguese) or banana spiders (not to be confused with the relatively harmless species of the genus Nephila) are a genus of aggressive and highly venomous spiders found in tropical South and Central America. These spiders are members of the Ctenidae family of wandering spiders.

The Brazilian wandering spiders appear in the Guinness Book of World Records 2007 for the most venomous animal and is the spider considered directly responsible for most human deaths due to envenomations from a spider bite.[1]

Contents

[edit] Description

The genus Phoneutria (Greek for "Murderess") contains eight similar scientifically described species. The Brazilian wandering spiders can grow to have a leg span of up to 4-5 inches (10-13 cm). Their body length ranges from 17 to 48 mm.[2] The genus is distinguished from other related genera such as Ctenus by the presence of dense prolateral scopulae on the pedipalp tibiae and tarsi in both sexes.[2]

The wandering spiders are so-called because they wander the jungle floor at night, rather than residing in a lair or maintaining a web. During the day they hide inside termite mounds, under fallen logs and rocks, and in banana plants and bromeliads. At least P. nigriventer is known to hide in dark and moist places in or near human dwellings.[2]

P. nigriventer mates during the dry season from April to June, which leads to frequent observations of the species during this time.[2]

[edit] Distribution

Phoneutria are found in forests from Costa Rica throughout South America east of the Andes into northern Argentina, including Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil and Paraguay. Three species (P. fera, P. reidyi and P. boliviensis) are found in the Amazon region, while the others are restricted to Atlantic rainforest of Argentina, Paraguay and Brazil, including forest fragments in the Cerrado (savannah). In Brazil Phoneutria is only absent in the northeastern region north of Salvador, Bahia.[2]

Phoneutria was introduced to Chile and Uruguay.[2]

[edit] Species

Per early 2008, this genus contains eight species:[3]

  • Phoneutria bahiensis Simó & Brescovit, 2001 — Atlantic rainforest of Brazil.
  • Phoneutria boliviensis (F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1897) — Central, South America.
  • Phoneutria eickstedtae Martins & Bertani, 2007 — Brazil.
  • Phoneutria fera Perty, 1833 — Ecuador, Peru, Brazil, Surinam, Guyana.
  • Phoneutria keyserlingi (F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1897) — Atlantic rainforest of Brazil.
  • Phoneutria nigriventer (Keyserling, 1891) — Brazil, northern Argentina; introduced to Uruguay.
  • Phoneutria pertyi (F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1897) — Atlantic rainforest of Brazil.
  • Phoneutria reidyi (F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1897) — Venezuela, Peru, Brazil, Guyana, Costa Rica.

[edit] Danger to humans

Phoneutria has a highly venomous bite. They include some of the relatively few species of spiders that present a threat to human beings.

These spiders are notorious both due to their toxic venom, and because they are not reluctant to attack people who appear threatening. Of the eight described species, P. nigriventer and P. fera most frequently receive mention in mass-media publications. P. nigriventer is the species responsible for most cases of venom intoxication in Brazil because it commonly is found in highly populated areas of south-eastern Brazil, such as the states of São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro and Espírito Santo. The species P. fera is native to the northern portion of South America in the Amazon of Brazil, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru and the Guyanas.

Recent studies suggest that these spiders only inject venom in approximately one-third of their bites and may only inject a small amount in another third. However, research in this area is hindered by the difficulty of identifying particular subspecies.

Bites from these spiders may result in only a couple of painful pinpricks to full-blown envenomation. In either case, people bitten by a Phoneutria or any Ctenid should seek immediate emergency treatment as the venom is possibly life threatening. P. fera and P. nigriventer are the two most commonly implicated as the most virulent of the Phoneutria spiders. Phoneutria not only has a potent neurotoxin, but is reported to have one of the most excruciatingly painful envenomations of all spiders due to its high concentration of serotonin.

Their wandering nature is another reason it is considered so dangerous. In densely populated areas, Phoneutria species usually search for cover and dark places to hide during daytime, leading it to hide within houses, clothes, cars, boots, boxes and log piles; thus generating accidents when people disturb it. Its other common name - the "banana spider" - as attributed because it is occasionally found as a 'stowaway' within shipments of bananas.

Despite their reputation as the world's deadliest spiders, there are multiple studies that dispute their capacity for fatal human envenomation. One study suggested that only 2.3% of bites (mainly in children) were serious enough to require antivenin.[4] However, other sources suggest they are the most dangerous or toxic spiders in the world based upon toxicology studies. One of the most notable and thorough studies is presented in the book "Venomous Animals and their Venoms Vol. III" edited by Wolfgang Bucheral and Eleanor Buckley, and clearly demonstrate Phoneutria nigriventer's extreme toxicity in a table showing that the amount necessary to kill a 20g mouse was only .006mg (intravenously) and .0134 subcutaneously as compared to Latrodectus mactans (Black Widow) at 0.110 and 0.2 respectively. The same study reports the death of two children killed by the same spider in São Sebastião identified as a Phoneutria, and identified by Bucheral. This demonstrates the fact that identification is key in the process of accurately associating a bite with the correct, offending species. Both P. nigriventer and P. fera are extremely dangerous. Pharmalogical studies strongly suggest the danger of Phoneutria envenomation and ranks various species of the Phoneutria genus arguably as one of the world's most dangerous spiders.

Aside from causing intense pain, the venom of the spider can also cause priapism - uncomfortable erections that can last for many hours and lead to impotence. The venom may eventually be used in erectile dysfunction treatments.[5]

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Herzig V, John Ward R, Ferreira dos Santos W (2002). "Intersexual variations in the venom of the Brazilian 'armed' spider Phoneutria nigriventer (Keyserling, 1891)". Toxicon 40 (10): 1399–406. PMID 12368110. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f Martins & Bertani 2007
  3. ^ The world spider catalog, version 8.5. American Museum of Natural History. Accessed February 9, 2008.
  4. ^ Bucaretchi et al., 2000
  5. ^ "Natural Viagra: Brazilian Spider Bite Causes Hours-Long Erection". FoxNews, May 1, 2007. Accessed May 6, 2007.

[edit] References

  • Bucaretchi F, Deus Reinaldo C, Hyslop S, Madureira P, De Capitani E, Vieira R (2000). "A clinico-epidemiological study of bites by spiders of the genus Phoneutria". Rev Inst Med Trop Sao Paulo 42 (1): 17-21. PMID 10742722. 
  • Martins, Rosana & Bertani, Rogério (2007): The non-Amazonian species of the Brazilian wandering spiders of the genus Phoneutria Perty, 1833 (Araneae: Ctenidae), with the description of a new species. Zootaxa 1526: 1-36. (with key and pictures) — Abstract

[edit] External links

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