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Tag: Spiders

  • They’re Huge, They’re Creepy, and They’re Back—An Expert’s Tips for Joro Spider Season

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    For residents of the southeastern United States, fall signals the return of Joro spiders—huge, bright yellow arachnids from Asia—haunting porches, gardens, and just about anywhere big enough for casting enormous webs.

    Joros don’t typically pose serious threats to humans. But their autumnal abundance does appear to be the source of significant irritation for local residents—something that David Coyle, an entomologist at Clemson University, knows better than most, as South Carolina’s state advisor for invasive species.

    After years of fielding Joro-related complaints, Coyle and his team decided to officially investigate these inquiries—a years-long effort resulting in two studies addressing the most common questions about Joro spiders, published Wednesday, October 22, in the Journal of Medical Entomology and the Journal of Economic Entomology.

    Gizmodo spoke with Coyle about the spiders and shared tips for dealing with unwanted Joro encounters. The following conversation has been lightly edited for grammar and clarity.

    Gayoung Lee, Gizmodo: What are Joro spiders, and why are they considered invasive?

    David Coyle: Joro spiders are native to China and parts of Asia. They first got to the U.S. probably around 2010 but were first discovered in 2014 in northern Georgia. Since then, they’ve spread to multiple states, even all the way up into the Northeast. There are populations in and around Baltimore, Boston, and Pennsylvania. The hotspots are definitely northern Georgia, western South Carolina and North Carolina, and far eastern Tennessee.

    Joro spiders have slowly spread throughout the southeastern United States since the early 2010s. Credit: David Coyle/University of Clemson

    They are an invasive species because… well, they’re not native to this continent, and they show pretty significant displacement of native species. This is the fifth year of our “spider surveys,” as we call them.

    And, where you have high populations of Joro spiders, you have little to no native or weaving spiders of that type. It’s still too early to know what their true impact will be, but we’re trying to track that down.

    Gizmodo: Why do people consider Joros pests?

    Coyle: They’re incredibly pestiferous, in that they are very comfortable being in and around human structures and landscapes. They won’t go inside a house at all, but they’ll be on your bushes, on the carport, on the deck, and across doorways. They’re also very big and yellow, so people notice them, and we get lots of calls about these things every fall.

    Gizmodo: What kind of calls?

    Coyle: Broadly speaking, “How do I get rid of them?” Whether that’s “on my favorite bush outside” or “they put a web across the pillars to my house.” The second most common question is, “Are they dangerous? Will they bite me? Will they bite my kids? Will they bite our pets?”

    Because these webs are huge—they can be 10, 15, or 20 feet across—and you walk into them to find a big spider on your head. When the adult females, these great big yellow-and-gray striped females, appear all over the place, people think, “Holy crap, what is going on out there?”

    Gizmodo: And what advice are you giving the callers?

    Coyle: This was actually the reason we did the new studies. We wanted to get concrete answers that weren’t just anecdotal. Based on the cumulative years of our team’s experience, we knew what happened here. We needed to do it in a scientific way to prove it.

    Gizmodo: I see. And how did you answer these questions in the paper?

    Coyle: I’ll start with what we call the management study, the one for the Journal of Economic Entomology. That was in response to the question, “How can I get rid of them?” So we looked online because we figured this was where people go to find solutions.

    We knew there were legitimate spider control products, so we tested several of those. Then we also evaluated things that we just found online: bleach, machine lubricant, hairspray, and some of these non-pest products that people used.

    In a scientifically legitimate and systematic way, we tested every one of these compounds on a bunch of spiders to see if it would kill them, and if so, how long it would take. If not, will it at least make the spider leave? Because for some people, maybe they just want it off their porch—not necessarily dead.

    What we ended up finding was that most of the commercial products work great. I’m not going to list any specific brands, but if it’s labeled as a spider control, that stuff works pretty darn good.

    Other things worked, too. I mean, machine lubricant works, but we do not advocate spraying that stuff all over your yard. That’s not what it’s for. We strongly recommend just using the stuff that’s labeled for that purpose, because it works just as well.

    Gizmodo: The second paper is about whether Joros are dangerous, right?

    Coyle: Right. We did a series of tests where we looked at a spider’s reaction to, basically, the human hand. We walked up to spiders in webs. We did everything from just holding our hand near it, trying to touch it, holding it in our hands, cupping it inside, to giving it a little squeeze.

    And in almost every case, that spider just wants to get away. They don’t want to be held. They don’t want to be touched. If you cup them in your hands, they just sort of sit there and freeze. The only time you can really get them to bite is when you pinch them—like, really aggravating it.

    Then we said, “Okay, let’s say that someone does get bit. How bad is it?” We got 22 volunteers and had them get bitten by Joros. Then we tracked the bite over the course of a week and had the volunteers rate the level of pain based on a system used by pediatricians.

    What we found was that it was akin to a mosquito bite. So it’ll be a little swollen, red, and itchy for about 24 hours, then it pretty much goes away. And most of the pain levels were super low, like 1 to 2 out of 10.

    So the take-home message is that, if you’re going to get bit by a Joro spider, you’ve pretty much got to be really antagonizing the spider.

    Gizmodo: You probably brought it upon yourself.

    Coyle: You 100% brought it upon yourself. Like, they want no part of you. They would rather not be on you. They would rather not be held by you. They just want to do their thing and be left alone.

    And if you accidentally walk into them, what’s their response? They’re going to drop to the ground and try to get away from you and get off it.

    Gizmodo: Having said all that, do you have any personal advice for coexisting with Joro spiders?

    Coyle: You don’t have to use chemicals to get rid of these things. A broom works great, your foot works great, and a stick works great. And if you just knock them out of their web a few days in a row, they’re going to take off and go somewhere else. I always tell people that using chemicals for something like this is often overkill, figuratively speaking.

    Then the other thing is that I’d reinforce that they’re not going to come in your house.  They don’t want to be in your house. This type of spider in general puts its webs between big things outside so stuff can fly into it. So, if there’s a Joro spider in your house, that means somebody brought it in there. It’s plain and simple.

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    Gayoung Lee

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  • Spiders Hijack Fireflies to Create Devious Glowing Death Traps

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    Fireflies glow to attract mates. As new research shows, however, a certain species of spider has learned to take advantage of this luminous natural phenomenon.

    In a Journal of Animal Ecology paper published August 27, ecologists report that the sheetweb spider (Psechrus clavis) appears to exploit firefly luminescence to attract more prey. Observational analysis and lab experiments revealed that, by using firefly light as bait, the nocturnal predators improved their hunting success. This is the second time researchers have observed such behavior in spiders, although the new paper describes a completely different species of spider.

    “This study sheds new light on the ways that nocturnal sit-and-wait predators can rise to the challenges of attracting prey and provides a unique perspective on the complexity of predator-prey interactions,” said I-Min Tso, study senior author and an ecologist at Tunghai University in Taiwan, in a release.

    A penchant for sparkly grub

    What alerted researchers to this odd behavior was the spiders’ tendency to immediately consume most grub—such as moths—caught in their webs, but not fireflies. When the glowing creatures flew into the sit-and-wait predator’s web, the spider simply left them hanging for about an hour, even occasionally crawling back to see if the fireflies were alive and glowing.

    Fireflies caught in a sheetweb spider’s web. Credit: British Ecological Society

    That seemed odd to the researchers; they knew it wasn’t because the spiders weren’t into fireflies—quite the opposite. Obviously, the researchers couldn’t ask the spiders if they were simply appreciating the pretty fireflies. So instead, they arranged an experiment to test whether the spiders’ behavior could be linked to an evolutionary benefit.

    For the experiment, the team prepared LED lights that closely resembled the glows of fireflies, plopping them onto the webs of sheetweb spiders. Webs adorned with these LED lights attracted three times the amount of prey compared to the controls without any lights.

    Even more surprising, when the researchers limited the prey to real fireflies, webs outfitted with LED lights attracted ten times more of them—mostly males. That suggests the fireflies were mistaking the artificial glow for potential mates.

    “Handling prey in different ways suggests that the spider can use some kind of cue to distinguish between the prey species they capture and determine an appropriate response,” explained Tso. “We speculate that it is probably the bioluminescent signals of the fireflies that are used to identify fireflies, enabling spiders to adjust their prey handling behavior accordingly.”

    However, the researchers admitted that their experiment used an artificial replication of the firefly glow. Ideally, a field experiment would use real fireflies, although this would be “extremely difficult in practice,” they noted.

    Not to mention unethical; many firefly species are listed as threatened.

    It’s tempting to believe that the spiders are simply appreciating the soft glow that’s being added to their webs. But as evolutionary behavior tends to go, the researchers’ hypothesis sounds valid. So until we can figure out spider communication, we’ll just have to assume the latter.

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    Gayoung Lee

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  • Denver woman bought four jumping spiders. Now she has 98

    Denver woman bought four jumping spiders. Now she has 98

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    Victoria Chaffin, a legal billing specialist by day and thrash metalhead by night, sits on the puffy couch in her Denver living room, grinning as she peers into her personal spider farm. 

    Chaffin takes a translucent plastic jar, pulsating with fruit flies. She shakes a few flies through a straw into a clear plastic cube. They unwittingly plummet toward their doom.

    Inside the cube, a clutter of baby spiders awaits. They cling to the walls, waiting for Chaffin to look away before they gobble up their dinner.

    Some of Victoria Chaffin’s many baby jumping spiders, in their box in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    She takes care to keep her new pets full. If they get too hungry, they might resort to cannibalism  — a bad habit that’s hard to shake. 

    Watching this sacrificial rite after weeks of covering political drama, crime and immigration, I wonder: What am I doing here?

    The answer is not that complicated. I met Victoria Chaffin through our Denverite Classifieds series, where Denverites meet other Denverites. In her posting, she described herself as a “full-time spider breeder looking for nerds and alt friends to enjoy outings.” 

    I am a nerd, so I called her up, and she invited me over for a spider feeding. Needing a break from hard news, I took her up on the offer to learn about spider feeding and breeding — and here I was, witnessing the drama of life and death on a coffee table.

    After the babies eat, Chaffin feeds her bigger jumping spiders a supersized snack to stave off their cannibalistic urges: silkworms. They look dead, until the spider venom penetrates them and they squirm one last time.

    Shadow, Victoria Chaffin’s young bulb jumper spider, heads towards a mealworm in his box in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    What makes a baby jumping spider a pet, and a silkworm food for that pet, when most people view them both as pests? 

    Perspective.

    “Some people keep mice as pets,” Chaffin says. “And some people feed them to their snake.”

    Most of the baby spiders are smaller than a Grape Nut. 

    They don’t seem particularly interested in leaving their cubes and hopping onto Chaffin’s hand, despite her urging. 

    When one finally does, it hangs out for a bit before leaping to the floor and disappearing into the carpet.

    When the babies grow up, Chaffin might sell them for $25 to $45, depending on their size. But for now, the babies are like her kids. And she wants the runaway spiderling — a pet for today and a long-term investment for tomorrow — back on her hand.

    Victoria Chaffin holds Shadow, a young jumping spider, in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    I spot the baby waiting on the carpet. It’s frozen, hoping we look away. And then it darts. After a short chase, Chaffin relaxes as she finally ushers the spiderling back into its home. 

    She swears the eight-legged leapers have distinct personalities. As those personalities evolve, she’s started naming them. 

    The mom, dubbed Mama, fiercely protects her babies and refuses to come out when strangers are present. Chaffin named one of the babies Shadow — a curious tween arachnid.

    Shadow, Victoria Chaffin’s young jumping spider, in his box in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Chaffin has always loved spiders.

    A couple months ago, she ordered her first four jumping spiders.

    She’s not sure if one was already pregnant, or if they bred in her City Park apartment. 

    But one of the spiders started growing… and growing… and growing.

    A jumping spider web in a terrarium in Victoria Chaffin’s apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Chaffin worried something was wrong, so she posted an image of the spider to an arachnophilic corner of Reddit. A squabble erupted: Some argued she had overfed the spider. Others claimed the spider was pregnant. 

    Soon, the spider mom settled the feud with two fuzzy egg sacs. After a few months, tiny, yellowish spiderlings crawled out, while some of their smaller siblings stayed in the sling. 

    Mama would leave yellow droplets of spider milk, rich in sugar, fats and proteins around the sac. Some tots enjoyed the snack-on-the-go, while other babies would sip milk straight from the birth canal.

    Victoria Chaffin plays with Shadow, a young jumping spider, in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    So I ask: Is a spider’s birth canal more like an anus, a vagina or both? Maybe they have the all-of-the-above orifice known as a cloaca, where the reproductive and digestive tracks merge?

    Chaffin picks up her phone.

    “Do spiders have cloacas?” Chaffin asks. The answer befuddles her. “Oh, they actually do. They do. I was wrong. OK, so their birthing canal is also their butthole.”

    But do spiders have cloacas?

    We really didn’t want to mess up a spider fact in our spider article. We got clashing explanations about spider cloacas from spider social media and other sources. ChatGPT and Google’s AI, as they often do, gave us confidently contradictory information.

    We finally reached out to Butterfly Pavilion‘s Entomology Manager, Cori Brant, to clear things up.

    “Spiders do have a stercoral pocket also called a ‘cloaca’ that connects into the hind gut before opening into the anus,” Brant wrote in an email.

    But that’s a different sort of cloaca than some vertebrates have.

    Shadow, Victoria Chaffin’s young bulb jumper spider, in his box in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    For vertebrates, the cloaca is the outlet for intestinal, urinary and genital systems. For spiders, uric acid and soil waste combine and then move through the anus. The genitals, it turns out, have nothing to do with that cloaca of a spider. 

    So, for Chaffin’s jumping spiders, their buttholes are not their birthing canals or baby spider milk troughs. 

    “Long story short, same word but very different meanings between vertebrate and invertebrate,” explained Brant. 

    There’s more to learn every day. 

    Chaffin has long been obsessed with other oddball animals.  

    She started her collection with Mango, a rotund South American “Pac-Man” frog with a massive mouth that looks like the Atari ghost eater. On this October night, Mango’s tumefied, suffering from what Chaffin calls his “piss balloon” — the bloat that happens when her frog has to take a leak. 

    Soon, he’ll be relieved, but for now, he’s awkward.

    Getting this urine-pressurized frog was the beginning of an animal arms race in Chaffin’s household. After Mango came the jumping spiders. 

    Then, Chaffin’s fiance, a Siberian asylum seeker who delivers packages for Amazon by day and lacerates himself with death metal by night, got jealous. So, he bought a tarantula.

    Aegon, Victoria Chaffin’s lizard, in his terrarium in her apartment near City Park. Oct. 17, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    In turn, Chaffin bought a skink a bashful lizard. She named him Aegon after the Game of Thrones character. 

    Now, her fiance, who declined to talk to me, is beginning to look for his next pet for their collection. 

    “I’m trying to convince him that we should wait ‘til we get a house,” Chaffin said. “We’re trying to save up for a house.”

    A big, hairy and brown tarantula, with golden stripes along her arms and back, sits in a human's hand.
    Sara Stevens, director of animal collections for the Butterfly Pavilion, holds a so-far unnamed Chaco Golden Knee tarantula. July 16, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    But if she can find a female tarantula to pair with her fiance’s, she might try another round of breeding. 

    Chaffin and her fiance are set to marry this fall. They don’t plan to have human children.

    “There’s something about giving birth,” she says, “that just creeps me out.”

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  • Creepy Cure: Deadly Spider Venom Tapped for Heart Attack Drug

    Creepy Cure: Deadly Spider Venom Tapped for Heart Attack Drug

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    Our ailing hearts might someday owe a debt of gratitude to a venomous spider. Scientists in Australia are about to begin a clinical trial for a heart attack medication that was originally derived from the venom of the K’gari funnel web spider.

    While there are now several classes of drugs that can prevent or treat heart issues, cardiovascular disease remains the single largest leading cause of death. So any new treatments that can safeguard our heart are still worthwhile. Researchers at the University of Queensland and elsewhere think they’ve landed upon such a candidate that was first isolated from a venomous species of funnel spider found on Australia’s K’gari island (formerly known as Fraser Island): a protein called Hi1a.

    These spiders are thought to have some of the deadliest and most complex venom ever found in spiders, but only a handful of the 3,000 proteins in their venom are considered outright lethal to humans, while others like Hi1a could have practical applications. The team’s earlier research in animals has found evidence that Hi1a can protect the heart when it’s being deprived of oxygen during a heart attack. It appears to do so by preventing the signals that cause heart cells to effectively self-terminate when there’s no oxygen around. That same attribute could also be used to improve the survivability of donor hearts during organ retrieval.

    After having obtained substantial funding from the Australian government’s Medical Research Future Fund, the researchers are now ready to start a clinical trial of Hi1a for heart attacks and heart donation, which is expected to run for four years.

    “This MRFF funding will enable us to undertake human clinical trials to test a miniaturized version of Hi1a as a drug to treat heart attack and protect donor hearts during the retrieval process,” said Glenn King, a researcher at the University of Queensland’s Institute for Molecular Bioscience, in a statement from the university. “If successful, it will improve patient survival and quality of life, dramatically expand the pool of donor hearts available for transplantation, and significantly reduce healthcare costs.

    Many promising drug candidates have failed to live up to their potential in human trials, either because they’re not as effective as hoped in people or because they’re not as safe and tolerable as earlier studies suggested they would be. So it will take time to know whether Hi1a is the real deal. But researchers are generally hopeful about the future of deriving new treatments from the venom of animals, a field known as venomics. Just last year, for instance, scientists in Brazil began a Phase II human trial testing their spider venom-derived drug as a treatment for erection dysfunction. King and his team also are hoping that Hi1a could be used to treat strokes and certain forms of epilepsy.

    So while spider venom might not give anyone superpowers, it could turn out to be a rich source of novel and important medicines.

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    Ed Cara

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  • Spider lovers scurry to Colorado town in search of mating tarantulas and community

    Spider lovers scurry to Colorado town in search of mating tarantulas and community

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    LA JUNTA, Colo. — Love is in the air on the Colorado plains — the kind that makes your heart beat a bit faster, quickens your step and makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up.

    It’s tarantula mating season, when male spiders scurry out of their burrows in search of a mate, and hundreds of arachnophiles flock to the small farming town of La Junta to watch them emerge in droves.

    Scientists, spider enthusiasts and curious Colorado families piled into buses just before dusk last weekend as tarantulas began to roam the dry, rolling plains. Some used flashlights and car headlights to spot the arachnids once the sun set.

    Back in town, festivalgoers flaunted their tarantula-like traits in a hairy leg contest — a woman claimed the title this year — and paraded around in vintage cars with giant spiders on the hoods. The 1990 cult classic film “Arachnophobia,” which follows a small town similarly overrun with spiders, screened downtown at the historic Fox Theater.

    For residents of La Junta, tarantulas aren’t the nightmarish creatures often depicted on the silver screen. They’re an important part of the local ecosystem and a draw for people around the U.S. who might have otherwise never visited the tight-knit town in southeastern Colorado.

    Word spread quickly among neighbors about all the people they had met from out of town during the third year of the tarantula festival.

    Among them was Nathan Villareal, a tarantula breeder from Santa Monica, California, who said he heard about the mating season and knew it was a spectacle he needed to witness. Villareal sells tarantulas as pets to people around the U.S. and said he has been fascinated with them since childhood.

    “Colorado Brown” tarantulas are the most common in the La Junta area, and they form their burrows in the largely undisturbed prairies of the Comanche National Grassland.

    In September and October, the mature males wander in search of a female’s burrow, which she typically marks with silk webbing. Peak viewing time is an hour before dusk when the heat of the day dies down.

    “We saw at least a dozen tarantulas on the road, and then we went back afterwards and saw another dozen more,” Villareal said.

    Male tarantulas take around seven years to reach reproductive readiness, then spend the rest of their lifespan searching for a mate, said Cara Shillington, a biology professor at Eastern Michigan University who studies arachnids. They typically live for about a year after reaching sexual maturity, while females can live for 20 years or more.

    The males grow to be about 5 inches long and develop a pair of appendages on their heads that they use to drum outside a female’s burrow. She will crawl to the surface if she is a willing mate, and the male will hook its legs onto her fangs.

    Their coupling is quick, as the male tries to get away before he is eaten by the female, who tends to be slightly larger and needs extra nutrients to sustain her pregnancy.

    Like many who attended the festival, Shillington is passionate about teaching people not to fear tarantulas and other spiders. Tarantulas found in North America tend to be docile creatures, she explained. Their venom is not considered dangerous to humans but can cause pain and irritation.

    “When you encounter them, they’re more afraid of you,” Shillington said. “Tarantulas only bite out of fear. This is the only way that they have to protect themselves, and if you don’t put them in a situation where they feel like they have to bite, then there is no reason to fear them.”

    Many children who attended the festival with their families learned that spiders are not as scary as they might seem. Roslyn Gonzales, 13, said she couldn’t wait to go searching for spiders come sunset.

    For graduate student Goran Shikak, whose arm was crawling with spider tattoos, the yearly festival represents an opportunity to celebrate tarantulas with others who share his fascination.

    “They’re beautiful creatures,” said Shikak, an arachnology student at the University of Colorado Denver. “And getting to watch them do what they do … is a joy and experience that’s worth watching in the wild.”

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  • A US museum curator was detained in Turkey on claims of spider smuggling. He says he has permits

    A US museum curator was detained in Turkey on claims of spider smuggling. He says he has permits

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    ISTANBUL — A curator at the American Museum of Natural History was detained in Istanbul while allegedly attempting to smuggle spider and scorpion samples, Turkish media reported. The curator said he had permits from the government to conduct his research.

    Lorenzo Prendini, an expert on arachnids at the New York-based museum, was held by police at Istanbul Airport while allegedly trying to take about 1,500 samples out of the country, news outlets reported.

    The state-run Anadolu news agency reported Monday that Prendini was detained for allegedly attempting to smuggle species found in Turkey. In emailed comments to The Associated Press, Prendini said he had appeared before a judge and was released without charge.

    Video published by the Demiroren News Agency showed officers searching hand luggage and removing plastic bags that appeared to be packed with dead spiders and scorpions.

    Prendini said the police had disregarded permits from the Turkish government to conduct his research in collaboration with Turkish scientists.

    “The police completely ignored this and relied on the testimony of an ‘expert’ who has a conflict of interest with my collaborators … and whose scientific research is highly questionable,” he said.

    “The police have completely violated due process and it appears they would like to find me guilty in the court of public opinion.”

    The museum’s website lists Prendini as the curator of its spider, scorpion, centipede and millipede collections. It says his research into spiders and scorpions has taken him to more than 30 countries.

    The museum did not respond to an email seeking comment.

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  • No, spiders don't want to mate with your viral body butter | TechCrunch

    No, spiders don't want to mate with your viral body butter | TechCrunch

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    Skincare girlies, fear not — your moisturizer probably does not attract spiders.

    Sol de Janeiro’s Delícia Drench Body Butter, which launched earlier this month, is quickly becoming a holy grail product among skincare enthusiasts. In addition to hyaluronic acid, the lotion is packed with flashy ingredients like copaiba resin, passionflower seed oil and prebiotic hibiscus to lock in moisture and soothe parched, “lackluster” skin, according to the brand’s website. Scented with velvet plum, vanilla orchid and sandalwood for a “mind-boosting experience” and packaged in cute violet jars, the $48 body butter is sure to be a staple in beauty hauls and GRWM videos.

    Sol de Janeiro went viral on X (formerly Twitter) and Reddit this week after users claimed they were hunted, bitten and (unsuccessfully) courted by wolf spiders when they applied the brand’s new moisturizer. While the body butter may be irresistible to humans, it’s unlikely that it’s sexually arousing to lonely arachnids.

    Catherine Scott, a spider behavioral ecologist and postdoctoral fellow at McGill University’s Lyman Lab, told TechCrunch that wolf spider mating involves visual and vibratory signaling, not just scents.

    “They have excellent vision (for spiders) and they would not simply run toward the source of an odor, even if it did smell like a potential mate, unless it also looked like a spider,” Scott said.

     

    The product began gaining popularity in beauty circles when early reviews lauded it for its hydrating properties and irresistible fragrance, but went viral on mainstream social media this week after a Sephora reviewer known as chemkats claimed that the scent “attracts wolf spiders.”

    “I wanted to love them sooo bad, but one of the ingredients is like kryptonite to wolf spiders! When I put it on instantly one will come out,” the reviewer wrote.

    They added that they’d normally see one “every like 3 years,” but since using the lotion, said they began seeing wolf spiders “every day.”

    “Oh and one time, the spider wanted to eat whatever ingredient it is so bad that it chased me,” chemkats continued. “Like it was legit following the scent.”

    One person claimed that a wolf spider bit them after they used their wife’s lotion. Another Sephora reviewer wrote, “Spiders love it, so do the people in the elevator.” A Reddit user said they put another product from the brand — known as “Brazilian Bum Bum Cream” — on a tissue, and a different brand’s lotion on a different tissue, and that spiders only appeared to be interested in the tissue with Sol de Janeiro’s product.

    Scott noted that the phrase “wolf spider” can apply to an “entire family of spiders” scientifically named Lycosidae. What many people might mistake as “wolf spiders” are likely house spiders in the Agelenidae family, which behave and chemically interact differently. 

    If the users did correctly identify their arachnid pursuers as wolf spiders, it’s “technically possible” that the lotion could contain compounds that spiders might investigate because they think they’re following chemical cues associated with prey.

    “But the story about the spider chasing the person wearing it does not hold up,” she continued. “This sound typical of when people are moving a lot near a spider and it is frightened, so it tries to run for cover, often into the person’s shadow — which makes the person think it is ‘attacking’ when in fact it is trying to hide.”

    Wolf spiders are “visual hunters,” and would only try to prey on a target smaller of them, she said, and they don’t feed on human blood, so they generally don’t have any reason to approach humans. 

    The original reviewer’s story is especially dubious because they’ve left similar Sephora reviews about beauty products attracting spiders, including a nearly identical one on another Sol de Janeiro product in March this year. In 2022 reviews of two different BondiBoost products, chemkats claimed that spiders kept landing on their head because of the products’ fragrance.

    “If they’re just trying to have fun, or if they truly have a grievance with Sol de Janeiro is uncertain,” a Reddit user wrote in a thread warning others about chemkats. “What [is] clear is that they’re trying to spread misinformation … I know that it’s been fun and games, but I just wanted to nip this in the bud before it gets even bigger.”

    But hysteria over the body butter has already spread, and many online — including news outlets — quoted a Reddit comment about the “pheromones” in the product. In response to a thread asking about the body butter, a Reddit user posited that the chemicals in the Sol de Janeiro’s product are also found in spider pheromones, and that the right combination of those compounds “might bring all the thirsty boy spiders to your yard.”

    The commenter appeared to cite a 2009 paper that identified compounds in the webs of sexually receptive female spiders, indicating “possible pheromone components.” The researchers also found that a combination of two of the identified compounds, farnesyl acetate and hexadecyl acetate, attracted male spiders. Both compounds are used in cosmetic products for fragrance and texture — just not in the viral body butter.

    “All of our products, including our new Delícia Drench Body Butter and upcoming Cheirosa 59 Perfume Mist are free from farnesyl acetate, diisobutyl phthalate, and hexadecyl acetate,” Sol de Janeiro said in an Instagram Story posted Thursday. “So while they may attract a lot of attention from people, they won’t from arachnids (even though we love all creatures at Sol de Janeiro. Hope that clears up any concerns and Happy 2024!”

    Even if the products did contain those compounds, as many cosmetic products do, the paper only identified components in the female-products sex pheromone of a specific species of spider, Scott said. Pheromones are used for members of the same species to communicate with each other and provide species-specific information like age, sex and previous mating experience.

    “Many spider pheromones used for sexual communication are short-range and require direct contact, with the spider essentially ‘tasting’ the silk or body of another individual to determine if it is the correct species and sex before approaching and attempting to court and mate,” Scott added.

    In other words, the compounds that would attract one species of spider wouldn’t attract another, like wolf spiders or house spiders.

    “What we are more likely talking about here are kairomones, which are info-chemicals produced by one species (like an insect pheromone, intended for communication between males and females of that species) used by another species (a spider) which is not the intended recipient of the chemical message,” Scott said.

    Some wolf spiders, for example, user kairomones to avoid larger spiders that might hunt them, or hunt in areas where there’s more prey for them. Research into the specific compounds that make up wolf spider pheromones is limited, but it’s highly unlikely that common beauty products will send them into a hunting (or mating) frenzy.

    It’s unfortunate news for those who were planning on building a spider army, like one Reddit user who asked others to send them unwanted body butter.

    “I believe pesticides can be harmful, despite the need for them, and spiders are a natural way to keep harmful insects from overpopulating!” the user said. “Taking on the first part of this project in winter means I can release my spider army when the weather is the best for them to survive and do their duty of killing these damn mosquitoes.”

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    Morgan Sung

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  • Snap! Venus fly trap fans ask South Carolina to honor plant

    Snap! Venus fly trap fans ask South Carolina to honor plant

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    COLUMBIA, S.C. — Conservationists are pushing for the Venus fly trap to be South Carolina’s official carnivorous plant, joining other official items such as the state bird (Carolina Wren), state opera (Porgy and Bess) and the state snack (boiled peanuts).

    In all, South Carolina has about five dozen official state things. There are already five different plants including yellow jasmine, which is the official flower, to the official fruit — the peach — to Indian Grass, which is, unsurprisingly, South Carolina’s official grass.

    But supporters said honoring the Venus fly trap isn’t about one extra thing students see on an elementary school worksheet.

    Instead, it’s about protecting and increasing awareness of an interesting species found only in this spot on the globe: the upper part of the South Carolina coast and a small sliver of southeast North Carolina.

    “In a state as small as ours that is growing every day, we have to protect the things that belong here,” said South Carolina Sen. Thomas McElveen, who lead a subcommittee Tuesday that voted to advance a bill to elevate the status of the carnivorous plant.

    The Democrat knows all about the allure of the plant with leaves that can trap insects to get a source of nutrition in the nutrient-poor soil where it grows.

    McElveen said his mom bought him one when he was a kid from the market. He named it “Audrey II” after the ravenous and cruel human-eating Venus fly trap in Little Shop of Horrors.

    In the wild, Venus fly traps are the size of a lima bean and mean no harm to anything other than spiders and flies. They have special hairs that when brushed — twice in succession to reduce the amount of false alarms by dust or rain — snap the leaves shut around the insect.

    If the prey continues to wiggle and is too big to escape from between the hairs, the plant releases acid that dissolves and digests the insect and provides nutrients.

    “This is a plant for South Carolina to be proud of. It is globally rare,” Coastal Conservation League biologist Trapper Fowler told senators.

    Venus fly traps face two big enemies — poachers and development. Poaching is illegal and the best groups of plants have been in heritage areas where they can grow away from thieves and avoid people in South Carolina’s fastest growing region. They’re also a fragile plant that needs fire more than water — the blazes clear out faster, denser overgrowth that can choke the smaller fly traps.

    The bill still has to get through the full Senate Family and Veterans Affairs Committee and then approval on the Senate floor before heading to the House.

    But there’s enough time this year for the Venus fly trap to join other official South Carolina things like the official spider (Carolina Wolf Spider), picnic cuisine (barbecue), dance (the Shag) and stone (blue granite).

    “You’re not just naming this plant and putting it in the back of our legislative manual,” McElveen said. “You may be doing something to raise awareness and conservation.”

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