Why you need guard spiders to protect your home


I just got my hands on Biology of Spiders by Rainer Foelix, and it’s very, very good…but beware, it’s an academic text, so the prices swing widely with the source and the edition, with some sources seeming to expect you’re sitting on a half million dollar grant so you’re not concerned with the cost. That’s not me, so I was happy to find a copy for $12 at Half-Price Books. Hooray for used book stores!

Anyway, I spent a pleasant morning starting to dig into this book. It’s technical and gets into a tremendous amount of detail on anatomy & physiology & behavior, and I was genuinely happy to see that it doesn’t get bogged down in the taxonomy wars. Only the last chapter is on Phylogeny and Systematics, and it’s short, and begins with a warning.

Now a book on biology is hardly the place to insert a chapter on classification.

W.S. Bristow, 1938

Despite Bristow’s warning, it seems necessary to cover the descent and classification of spiders briefly. I must admit, however, that our real knowledge of the phylogeny of spiders is very scanty, and hence to present any reliable pedigree is quite impossible.

Yes! My kind of biology text!

It saves the lengthy discussions for the good stuff, like this.

…only about 20-30 of the 34,000 species of spiders are dangerously poisonous to man (Schmidt, 1973; Maretic, 1975).

The prime example is certainly the black widow spider, Latrodectus mactans, from the family Theridiidae. The bite itself is not particularly painful and often is not even noticed (Maretic, 1983, 1987). The first real pain is felt after 10-60 minutes in the regions of the lymph nodes, from where it spreads to the muscles. Strong muscle cramps develop and the abdominal muscles become very rigid (this is an important diagnostic feature!).Another typical symptom is a contorted facial expression, called facies latrodectismi, which revers to a flushed, sweat-covered face, swollen eyelids, inflamed lips, and contracted masseter muscles. If the breathing muscles of the thorax become affected, this can eventually lead to death. Besides the strong muscle pain, black widow spider venom (BWSV) also elicits psychological symptoms, which range from anxiety feelings to actual fear of death. Apparently the toxin can pass the blood-brain barrier and directly attack the central nervous system.

Without any treatment the symptoms will last for about 5 days and a complete recovery may take weeks. About 50 years ago, lethality was 5% in the USA (Thorp and Woodson, 1945), but is now less than 1% (Zahl, 1971). The best treatment against a bite from a black widow is a combination of calcium gluconate and antivenin (e.g., Lyovac; McCrone and Netzloff, 1965) injected intraveously. Calcium causes the pain to subside quickly and the antidote binds to the toxin. The patient feels relieved within 10-20 minutes and will completely recover in a few hours.

The poison (BWVS) is a neurotoxin that affects the neuromuscular endplates, but also synapses in the CNS. The synaptic vesicles become completely depleted, causing a permanent blockage of the synapse (Clark et al., 1972; Griffiths and Smyth, 1973; Tzeng and Siekevitz, 1978; Wanke et al., 1986). One component of the poison (α-Latrotoxin) binds to a presynaptic receptor of cholinergic synapses (Meldolesi at al., 1986).

Neat-o! This is my kind of biology book, although you can tell from the dates of the references that it’s a bit old — there hasn’t been a death from a black widow bite since 1983, but I won’t mention that on any of the signage around my house.

Comments

  1. says

    Although, I was annoyed at the frequent use of “poison” instead of “venom”. We’re not going to be eating a lot of spiders.

    It’s a translation from the German, which may explain the misuse.

  2. chrislawson says

    I wonder if the Schmidt referred to there is the same Schmidt who developed the insect sting pain index.

  3. Hemidactylus says

    So would a black widow bite be more like ab crunches or planking? A novel way to strengthen your core?

  4. says

    No — it’s a reference to a G. Schmidt, published in German in Germany. That would have been an American, Justin Schmidt.

  5. birgerjohansson says

    I am more interested in hurting intruders, not killing them. If people feel exceuciating pain for weeks after a bite they will spread the knowledge and deter other would-be intruders.
    If they die, I will be left with the smelly option of mounting their heads on spikes around the property.

    Keep a syringe with atropine handy, if it works for nerve gas it should work for black widow venom.

    We badly need a pain index for spiders. (And spiders with antifreeze for blood*, so they can guard the place in winter)

    *acid blood is unfortunately covered by Weyland-Yutani patents. Big companies are bastards.

  6. microraptor says

    birgerjohansson @6: That’s why the platypus is a better security animal than a black widow. The venom won’t kill an intruder, but it’ll sure make them wish it had.

  7. birgerjohansson says

    Good idea. An evergreen variant of the gynpie-gympie will keep thieves and MAGA raiders away.

  8. Jim Brady says

    I can remember finding redbacks (virtually the same as black widows) in various places around our house (under the garage – once in the letterbox) and they are not the least aggressive. You need trapdoors which will attack intruders.

  9. cheerfulcharlie says

    Proverbs 30:28
    “The spider taketh hold with her hands, and is in kings’ palaces.”

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