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The Darling Downs funnel-web spider was described by Hickman in 1964 as Atrax infensus before being moved to the genus Hadronyche in 1988. The type specimen is a male spider that was collected in Toowoomba, Queensland, in 1963. [1]
Some funnel web spiders are deadly. ©NNphotos/Shutterstock.com. Perhaps the most famous group of spiders that construct funnel-shaped webs is the Australian funnel-web spiders. There are 36 of ...
A ginormous and deadly funnel-web spider has been handed in to a reptile park in Australia, where staff said it was the largest of its kind they’d ever seen.. Fittingly named Hemsworth, the ...
Venom from the male Sydney funnel-web spider (A. robustus) is used in producing the antivenom, but it appears to be effective against the venom of all species of atracids. [29] Australian funnel-web spider antivenom has also been shown, in vitro, to reverse the effects of eastern mouse spider (Missulena bradleyi) venom. [30]
The Australian Reptile Park recently recorded its largest male funnel-web spider yet, CNN reported. According to the zoo, which is located north of Syndey, Australia, the spider measures a ...
Hadronyche valida, also known as the true funnel-web spider, is a species of funnel-web spider in the Atracidae family. It is endemic to Australia. It was described in 1918 by Australian arachnologists William Joseph Rainbow and Robert Henry Pulleine. The specific epithet valida means ‘true’ or ‘valid’. [1] [2]
The deadly 3.54-inch-long spider Atrax christenseni is among the most dangerously venomous spiders for humans. ... Only male Sydney funnel-web spiders have venom that can kill an adult, and 13 ...
Hexathelidae is a family of mygalomorph spiders. [1] It is one of a number of families and genera of spiders known as tunnelweb or funnel-web spiders . In 2018, the family was substantially reduced in size by genera being moved to three separate families: Atracidae , Macrothelidae and Porrhothelidae .