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Mexican golden red rump tarantula

The Mexican golden red rump tarantula, Brachypelma albiceps, is species of the genus Brachypelma. The carapace is a light golden color with black legs and a black abdomen covered with longer red hairs. Females typically live for about 15 years (up to 20). Males usually live about 5 years or up to 12 months after the last molt.[1][2]

Contents

  • 1 Habitat
  • 2 Food
  • 3 Reproduction
  • 4 Pets
  • 5 References

Habitat

Brachypelma albiceps (formerly Brachypelma ruhnaui) is endemic to the Central highlands of Mexico, especially in Guerrero and south of Morelos. In the wild they build long underground burrows, typically under large rocks, but may inhabit nests abandoned by rodents or other animals. They are most active at night and dusk.[1]

Food

Diet typically includes crickets, grasshoppers, beetles, cockroaches . In captivity, live food is typically required, such as moths, mealwormsand pinky mice, as dead food may be ignored.[3]

Reproduction

Females lay cocoons containing roughly 500 (up to 900) eggs two months after mating. Nymphs hatch 8–10 weeks later.[1]

Pets

B. albiceps are commonly available at pet stores. Lighting is not needed, as these spiders naturally prefer to live in darkness.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d http://www.terrarium.com.pl/zobacz/brachypelma-albiceps-630.html
  2. ^ http://brachypelma.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=12:balbiceps&catid=7:bcaresheets&Itemid=50
  3. ^ Muller-Esnault, Susan, DVM. "Rose Hair Tarantulas or Chilean Rose Hair" (2009). http://www.critterology.com/rose_hair_tarantulas_or_chilean_rose_hair-192.html

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In the latest article

  • Unreviewed

    Brachypelma albiceps Pocock, 1903

This article is unpublished.

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Source information

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Supplier: Wikipedia

"Mexican golden red rump tarantula." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 12 Nov 2012, 22:21 UTC. 27 Nov 2012 <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mexican_golden_red_rump_tarantula&oldid=524437096>.

Revisions

  • 2013-03-24 08:13:05 UTC
  • 2013-01-12 04:46:41 UTC
  • 2012-12-29 03:04:36 UTC
  • 2012-11-28 04:19:29 UTC
  • 2012-11-14 05:07:26 UTC
  • 2012-10-03 03:32:59 UTC
  • 2012-06-27 04:24:59 UTC
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  • 2011-12-07 05:45:20 UTC
  • 2011-11-15 04:34:00 UTC
  • 2011-10-18 02:43:59 UTC
  • 2011-10-17 05:51:29 UTC
  • 2011-08-16 09:21:11 UTC
  • 2011-05-24 13:22:49 UTC
  • 2011-04-10 04:38:28 UTC

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