Subscribe Now! National Geographic Magazine $15
Visit our Online Shops

Sign up for free

Newsletters

Once a month
get new photos
and expert tips.

Tarantula
Aphonopelma chalcodes

Photo: A tarantula feeding
A tarantula feeding
Photograph by Paul Zahl

Tarantula Profile

Tarantulas give some people the creeps because of their large, hairy bodies and legs. But these spiders are harmless to humans (except for a painful bite), and their mild venom is weaker than a typical bee's. Among arachnid enthusiasts, these spiders have become popular pets.

Tarantulas periodically shed their external skeletons in a process called molting. In the process, they also replace internal organs, such as female genitalia and stomach lining, and even regrow lost appendages.

There are hundreds of tarantula species found in most of the world's tropical, subtropical, and arid regions. They vary in color and behavior according to their specific environments. Generally, however, tarantulas are burrowers that live in the ground.

Tarantulas are slow and deliberate movers, but accomplished nocturnal predators. Insects are their main prey, but they also target bigger game, including frogs, toads, and mice. The South American bird-eating spider, as it name suggests, is even able to prey upon small birds.

A tarantula doesn't use a web to ensnare prey, though it may spin a trip wire to signal an alert when something approaches its burrow. These spiders grab with their appendages, inject paralyzing venom, and dispatch their unfortunate victims with their fangs. They also secrete digestive enzymes to liquefy their victims' bodies so that they can suck them up through their straw-like mouth openings. After a large meal, the tarantula may not need to eat for a month.

Tarantulas have few natural enemies, but parasitic pepsis wasps are a formidable exception. Such a wasp will paralyze a tarantula with its sting and lay its eggs on the spider's body. When the eggs hatch, wasp larvae gorge themselves on the still living tarantula.

The tarantula's own mating ritual begins when the male spins a web and deposits sperm on its surface. He copulates by using his pedipalps (short, leglike appendages located near the mouth) and then scuttles away if he can—females sometimes eat their mates.

Females seal both eggs and sperm in a cocoon and guard it for six to nine weeks, when some 500 to 1,000 tarantulas hatch.

Fast Facts

Type: Bug
Diet: Carnivore
Average lifespan in the wild: Up to 30 years
Size: Body: 4.75 in (12 cm) long; Leg span, up to 11 in (28 cm)
Weight: 1 to 3 oz (28 to 85 g)
Size relative to a tea cup:
Illustration of the animal's relative size

Multimedia

Other Biting or Stinging Bugs

Photo: A leaf-cutter ant carrying leaf

Ant

Map: Locator map for the tarantula
 Tarantula range

Special Advertising Sections

Photo: Prize ribbon

Photo Contest

We received over 12,000 entries, and over 28,000 votes were cast. Find out who takes home the Grand Prize!

Photo: Glass of water

Take Quiz

Eighteen percent of the world's population can't get safe drinking water. Test your water knowledge.

Bugs Right Rail

Get the Latest Headlines

Photo: Three-horned chameleon

Make us your online news source.

Get Animal Pictures

Photo: Honeybee on a flower

Get your daily dose of photos.

Bring Your Phone to Life

Image: Mobile phone and giraffe

Put the sights and sounds of National Geographic on your mobile phone.

For Kids!

Photo: A cartoon dog

It's no stretch to find fun facts on our Kids site!

Shop National Geographic DVDs

Photo: Human Footprint DVD cover

Whatever your interest, you'll be entertained and educated with our collection of best-selling DVDs.