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Largest Web-Spinning Spider Discovered

LiveScience
By Jeanna Bryner
,
LiveScience
posted: 36 DAYS 11 HOURS AGO
comments: 19
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LiveScience.com
(Oct. 21) - About the size of a standard CD, a newly described spider is now considered the largest in a class of web-spinners.
Scientists discovered remains of the species of golden orb-weaver, now called Nephila komaci, among museum collections in South Africa and recently more dead specimens from Tembe Elephant Park in South Africa. However, none of the discoverers knew at the time that the specimens belonged to the not-yet-described spider.
The oversized dimensions — a body length of 1.5 inches and a leg span of 4 to 5 inches — describe the females of N. komaci only. The males, which are considered normal-size spiders, are on average five times smaller.
Jonathan Coddington of the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History says the new species is "just a whisker" bigger — a few millimeters to be specific — than other Nephila species, which are known for their enormous body and web sizes.
(The largest spider in the world may be the Goliath bird-eater, or Theraphosa blondi, which has a leg span of up to about 10 inches, 25 cm, according to the Denver Museum of Nature and Science. This tarantula does not spin webs.)
Coddington and Matjaž Kuntner of the Institute of Biology of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts and the Smithsonian Institution describe N. komaci in the Oct. 21 issue of the journal PLoS ONE. They found that natural selection has nudged some of the females to larger and larger sizes, which allows them to lay more eggs and increase chances of passing on their genes.
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Animal Discoveries
A new monkey subspecies with a foot-long tail has been discovered in Brazil's Amazon rainforest. The monkey, dubbed Mura's saddleback tamarin, was first seen by scientists in 2007, but its discovery was reported in June. The creature, depicted here in a drawing, is being threatened by planned development projects in the area, a researcher said.
Livescience.com
Livescience.com
Since nobody has knowingly seen a live spider of this species, even after several African expeditions, the researchers speculate the species could be endangered, or at least hiding out high in trees where grounded scientists have yet to look.
Evolving body size
The researchers placed the spider onto an evolutionary tree with other Nephila species and ran a computer simulation to figure out how size changed over evolutionary time and whether natural selection played a role.
While males showed no real jumps or dips in their size, hovering at about one-fifth the size of females, the female spiders consistently increased in size over time. The result is a group of giant spiders that evolved mainly in Africa.
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As for why the females ballooned over time, Coddington says it makes sense from a reproductive perspective, because the larger the body size the more eggs she can lay.
"The problem with becoming bigger is it takes you longer to do it. You have to eat and eat. The longer you put off sexual maturity the more likely it is you will die," Coddington told LiveScience. "But if you're willing to take risks, you can become enormous and have thousands of eggs."
In addition, the female giants likely have few enemies, he added. In fact, reports suggest some Nephila spiders occasionally snag birds, bats and lizards.
Males, on the other hand, have the sole job of inseminating a female of its species, whose entire life is spent on a web. "Males are staying small because they can get away with it. If all you have to do is inseminate somebody and it doesn't matter how big you are, your best strategy is to become an adult as fast as you can," Coddington said.
Spider sex
One puzzler the team turned up: While the females were gaining in fecundity, males seemed to be losing their sexual prowess.
Sex between male and female Nephila spiders typically leaves females unable to re-mate and males castrated. "Males stick their business end up the females and then they break it off, and in doing so they plug the female," Coddington said.
The team compared the shape of the male pedipalps, or a pair of appendages used to transfer sperm, with that of the female genitals in Nephila species.
"These guys have long, whippy pedipalps, and over evolutionary time they seem to be gradually losing the ability to plug up females," Coddington said.
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Animals in the News
Chanel, a white dachshund who held the Guinness world record for oldest dog, died Aug. 28 at age 21. Earlier this year, her owners said she was in good health, with the exception of sunglasses she had to wear for cataracts.
Meredith Daniels, Newsday / MCT
Meredith Daniels, Newsday / MCT
© Imaginova Corp. All rights reserved.
2009-10-21 13:12:10

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COMMENTS ( 19 )
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Joebudgie
10:19AM Oct 22 2009 
I believe that God created man in his image. But there is room in my mind to accept that God chose to use evelution to adapt animals to the planet. In your own lifetime you have "seen" the average height of a human being increase. Knowing that all things are possible for God perhaps there is room for adjusting your thoughts about evelution too? Who are we to "limit" what God might choose to do?
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Arnoldjmj
9:55AM Oct 22 2009 
The writer mentions how the spiders have gotten larger and implies the Spider choose to get larger "like it has some control over it size". It is very interesting the things some people have been "conditioned" to believe and not question. The psuedo-science of Evolution is based upon how far man is willing to go, to deny God, and those who are willing to believe any lie so long as it denies the extistance to a true and living GOD.
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Arnoldjmj
9:54AM Oct 22 2009 
The writer mentions how the spiders have gotten larger and implies the Spider choose to get larger "like it has some control over it size". It is very interesting the things some people have been "conditioned" to believe and not question. The psuedo-science of Evolution is based upon how far man is willing to go, to deny God, and those who are willing to believe any lie so long as it denies the extistance to a true and living GOD.
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(4 RATINGS)
 
JHicksArch
9:35AM Oct 22 2009 
I know this is amazing to find a spider of the size of a CD. Three years ago, I killed a wolf spider that was sitting on the door jamb of one of my mini-warehouse buildings. It was the size of a CD and a good whack with a stiff broom brought him down.

Now, that being the biggest spider I have ever seen, I am wondering if this spider has any cousins hanging around. I cannot even image getting bit by a wolf spider of this size. Crap, I never heard of one getting that big
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Fran Platt
9:22AM Oct 22 2009 
If you "hate spiders with every bone in your body," then you have what psychologists refer to as a phobia, which is a type of mental illness. To suggest that a species ought to be deliberately driven to extinction to accommodate your particular phobia is a bit extreme - not to mention environmentally irresponsible when one considers that all forms of life are connected in a web (no pun intended) of interdependence. Killing off any species, no matter how unappealing to humans, can end up having disastrous and unpredictable consequences for us all. A safer way to deal with your phobia would be to get some therapy!
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Buphettphans
9:10AM Oct 22 2009 
sounds pretty negative to me!
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Sarge77
9:07AM Oct 22 2009 
What about those giant spiders in the old Tarzan movie that had Boy captured? Now, they were BIG!! Fortunately, Tarzan "took care of them" and I guess they must be extinct because of Tarzan.
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colcam
8:55AM Oct 22 2009 
This "article" is another example of the dumbing down of the modern world. It is poorly worded, makes basic stupid statements such as the "five times smaller" size, which, of course, does not exist-- but also uses a correct "one fifth the size" as part of a statement about how the size of the male does not change, but remains the same ratio-- and still manages to improperly put the information in context; if the female increased in size dramatically and the males remained one fifth their size, then the males must have changed in size, too. It looks like sloppy work on the part of the writer in research and clarification, and even sloppier work by the editor. Science can be interesting, it can be boring, easy or complex, but the researchers, writers. and editors need to be clear and correct in how the information is presented.
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RDSLS2
8:46AM Oct 22 2009 
I dont understand the inherent need for some people to reply negativly no matter what the subject. If you didnt want to read a story about spiders, DONT, but please dont read it and feel like someone just wasted your time and post negativly about it. AOL has to fill space, or you would complain that there is nothing to read, so they post articles about a wide variety of topics. But dont click on a subject matter you have no interest in , then BITCH about it.
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(13 RATINGS)
 
xdopeex0
8:43AM Oct 22 2009 
i hate spiders with every bone in my body. Why keep these spiders that can kill people with thier venom or who can harm children? this makes no sense to me. I understand that spiders are important with eating mosquitos and what not, but ones that are as big as my hand GOT TO GO!
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(10 RATINGS)
 
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About the size of a standard CD, a newly described spider is now considered the largest in a class of web-spinners. Scientists discovered remains of the species of golden orb-weaver, now called Nephila komaci, among museum collections in South Africa and recently more dead specimens from Tembe Elephant Park in South Africa.