Goliath Bird-Eating Spiders: Giant Arachnids

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Goliath Bird-Eating Spiders: Giant Arachnids A Reading A Z Level Q Leveled Book Word Count: 979 Connections Writing Do you think the Goliath bird-eating spider is a good name for this spider? Why or why not? Using details from the book, write a persuasive essay supporting or criticizing the Goliath bird-eating spider s name. Science Design a habitat for the Goliath birdeating spider. Use facts from the book to create your habitat. LEVELED BOOK Q Goliath Bird-Eating Spiders: Giant Arachnids GIANTS OF THE ANI MAL W ORLD Written by Nathan Grove Visit www.readinga-z.com for thousands of books and materials. www.readinga-z.com

Goliath Bird-Eating Spiders: Giant Arachnids appendages burrows captivity glands molt Words to Know nocturnal paralyzes sense venom Front cover: A Goliath spider in the Amazon rainforest in South America Title page: When a Goliath spider assumes this position, it is ready to defend itself. Page 3: Goliath spiders look similar to the adults only smaller. Photo Credits: Front cover, back cover: Simon Balson/Alamy; icon: Elena Belyakova/ istock/thinkstock; title page, page 6: Nick Gordon/ardea.com; pages 3, 7, 14 (top): Pascal Goetgheluck/ardea.com; page 5: James H. Robinson/Science Source; pages 8 (main), 15: Pete Oxford/Minden Pictures; page 8 (inset): Daniel Heuclin/NPL/Minden Pictures; page 10: tbkmedia.de/alamy; pages 11, 14 (bottom): Piotr Naskrecki/Minden Pictures; page 12: Mark Moffett/ Minden Pictures; page 13: Tom McHugh/Science Source Written by Nathan Grove www.readinga-z.com Focus Question How do the unique features of a Goliath bird-eating spider help it to survive in the rainforest? Goliath Bird-Eating Spiders: Giant Arachnids Giants of the Animal World Level Q Leveled Book Learning A Z Written by Nathan Grove All rights reserved. www.readinga-z.com Correlation LEVEL Q Fountas & Pinnell Reading Recovery DRA N 30 30

Big, Hairy, and Heavy It s nighttime in the rainforest. As you walk down the path, you see the biggest spider you ve ever seen. This giant spider has eight long, hairy legs and fangs that measure 0.75 inches (2 cm) about half the size of a person s thumb! Its venom can stop a mouse in its tracks with a single bite. Table of Contents A giant of the spider world, the Goliath bird-eater is the heaviest spider in the world. They can weigh up to 6 ounces (170 g) about the weight of a large apple. Big, Hairy, and Heavy... 4 How Big Is It? Eyes, Legs, and Hair... 6 Life in the Steamy Rainforest... 9 Hunters on the Prowl... 10 What Eats a Giant Spider?... 12 Growing Up as a Tarantula... 13 Why Spiders Matter... 15 Glossary... 16 Human hand length: 7.44 inches (18.89 cm) width: 3.3 inches (8.4 cm) Goliath spider diameter: 12 inches (30.48 cm) weight: 6 ounces (0.17 kg) 3 4

Eyes, Legs, and Hair Goliath bird-eating spiders are the largest of all tarantulas. Tarantulas are a type of big, hairy spider found in many parts of the world. Like many other spiders, Goliaths have eight eyes and eight legs. They also have two main body parts. The front part contains the spider s eyes, mouth, stomach, and brain. The legs are also attached to this part. The part in the back contains the spider s silk-making glands. Goliath tarantulas are covered in coffeecolored hairs. Their long, thick legs have dark brown hairs. The hairs are lighter in color at each joint, or knee. The two limbs next to the head are called pedipalps. They help to hold prey. Goliaths sometimes have a golden color in places, which accounts for their scientific name, blondi. Running into a spider the size of a dinner plate can be scary, but you don t need to worry. These spiders aren t dangerous to humans. They are an important part of the tropical habitats where they live. 5 6

What Makes a Tarantula a Spider? Legs attach to the front body part. pedipalps The front body part has the eyes, fangs, mouth, and stomach. Female Goliaths have slightly shorter legs than males, but their bodies are bigger. Even though they have eight eyes, these giant spiders have poor eyesight. They can tell light from dark, but they can t make out much detail. Instead, they depend on special hairs that cover their body to sense when prey is near. The hairs can feel the slightest vibrations on the ground and in the air. When a mouse or other small prey crawls by wham! It triggers an attack. The Goliath has an extra set of short limbs near the spider s head to hold a victim. These short appendages then help pull the prey toward the Goliath s mouth and fangs. Spiders use their fangs to put poison into the animals they hunt. All spiders have eight legs jaws with fangs (most spiders make venom) glands that make silk The back part contains the silk glands. a tough, protective outer skeleton eyes (most have eight eyes) sensory hairs on their bodies 7 8

Life in the Steamy Rainforest Goliath spiders live in the hot, humid rainforests of South America. They live in burrows under the ground or in spaces under rocks. Unlike many spiders, they don t spin a web, but they make silk to use in their burrows. Tropical rainforests are hot spots for living things. From bats, butterflies, and birds to big cats and lush plant life, these habitats are rich with life. Rainforests cover only about 6 or 7 percent of Earth s surface. However, they contain more than half of the plant and animals species in the world. Goliaths will often drag their prey back to their burrows to eat it. Hunters on the Prowl Tarantulas are nocturnal, which means they normally stay hidden in their burrows during the day. After the Sun goes down, they hunt. Goliath spiders are skilled predators. Crickets, beetles, frogs, bats, mice, and other small animals are all on their menu. They sometimes eat a small bird, but feathered creatures aren t a normal part of their diet. Where Do Goliath Bird-Eating Spiders Live? Guyana ATLANTIC OCEAN Suriname Venezuela French Guiana Brazil These tarantulas have extra-large, hollow fangs that are filled with venom. When a mouse or other small animal gets close, Goliaths pounce and grab the prey with their legs. The spiders inject the prey with venom through their fangs. SOUTH AMERICA PACIFIC OCEAN Goliath spider range 9 10

The venom attacks the nervous system and paralyzes small prey. It isn t strong enough to cause serious problems in humans, but a bite can cause swelling and pain like a sting from a bee or wasp. The Goliath spider mouth is a straw-shaped opening that can only suck. All food must be in liquid form. Spiders spray strong juices on the paralyzed animal they ve bitten. These juices turn the flesh into liquid. A large tarantula can turn a mouse into a small pile of hair and bones in about thirty-six hours by breaking down the mouse tissue and sucking up the liquid remains. Goliath spiders can shoot a cloud of stiff hairs at their attacker. These hairs have tiny hooks that cause tremendous irritation. A paralyzed tarantula is being dragged to its own burrow by a spider wasp. What Eats a Giant Spider? Although Goliath bird-eating tarantulas are giants of the spider world, they do have enemies. To scare away predators, Goliaths rear up on their hind legs or make a loud hissing sound by rubbing the hairs on their legs together. Still, hawks, owls, skunks, and snakes sometimes eat these spiders. One of their deadliest predators is an insect known as a spider wasp or tarantula hawk. When a female wasp spies a tarantula, she stings it. The sting paralyzes the spider but doesn t kill it. The wasp digs a hole, places the paralyzed spider in it, and lays an egg on it. When the egg hatches, the wasp larva makes a tiny hole in the spider s body and crawls inside. Then the larva feeds on the spider. 11 12

Growing Up as a Tarantula Goliath spiders are loners. They only get together with other spiders during the mating season or when they re guarding their young. Females are bigger than males and live much longer. Some females have survived more than twenty-five years in captivity. Like all spiders, these tarantulas molt as they outgrow their hard outer covering, which is called an exoskeleton. They leave their old skin behind as a new outer skin hardens underneath. Adult Goliaths molt once or twice a year. Spiderlings, or young spiders, molt more often. A tarantula (right) has just emerged from its shed skin (left). A Goliath spider is tending to her young. The young spiders will change color as they age. After mating, a female Goliath lays about fifty eggs in a silk egg sac. She stores the sac in her burrow and guards the eggs until they hatch in about six to seven weeks. The little spiderlings stay under her watchful eye for a few weeks until after their first molt. Then they re on their own for the rest of their lives. Like many spiders, Goliath bird-eating spiders have forty-eight knees. Each leg has six joints! The Goliath birdeating spider was named by early explorers in the 1800s who discovered one eating a hummingbird. 13 14

Glossary Their weight makes Goliath spiders slower climbers than most other spiders. Why Spiders Matter Goliaths have been around for millions of years and they haven t changed much in all that time. Their sheer size has always fascinated people. We continue to learn more about these spiders, from how their venom works to why females live longer than males. Like all living things, these spiders play an important role in the habitats where they live. They help keep rodents, insects, and other prey species under control. They also provide food for other animals. The world just wouldn t be as interesting without these hairy giants crawling through the forest. appendages (n.) burrows (n.) captivity (n.) glands (n.) molt (v.) nocturnal (adj.) paralyzes (v.) sense (v.) venom (n.) external body parts that stick out from the body, such as arms or legs (p. 7) holes dug in the ground by an animal for use as a home (p. 9) the state of being confined or without freedom (p. 13) organs that make and give off substances that are necessary for a body process (p. 6) to shed an outer covering such as skin, hair, feathers, or a shell before replacing it with a new layer (p. 13) active at night rather than during the day (p. 10) causes one or more parts of a body to become unable to move (p. 11) to receive information about the world through sight, touch, taste, smell, or hearing (p. 7) a poisonous fluid that some animals use to kill prey and defend themselves, usually delivered by biting or stinging (p. 4) 15 16