How long do cobalt blue tarantulas live




















If the soil is covered in moss, make sure to keep open space for their burrow. Also, they need a great humidity, so the moss should be sprayed daily and fresh water needs to be provided. As a water container you could use wide and shallow water dish or a tarantula sponge. You should also provide an under-tank heating pad. If you need help buying an enclosure why not check out our enclosure review. The temperature in the terrarium should be approximately Fahrenheit C.

The humidity should be around percent at all times. Its recommended for the moss in the tank to be sprayed with water on a daily basis in order for the humidity to be on point. The Cobalt Blue is one of the most aggressive ones, meaning that they are easily scared and triggered to attack. They are also very fast and can escape easily if the top of the tank is not secured or high enough to be out of their reach.

The male gets closer and starts tapping while vibrating its body. They either dig these burrows themselves, or simply move into used ones created by other creatures.

Nocturnal in nature, the cobalt blue tarantula typically ventures out only at night searching for food. Males also search for females at night. Their days are spent resting in their burrows. Although the bite of the cobalt blue can be extremely painful, its venom is generally not considered dangerous to humans.

Tarantulas, like most arachnid species, have adapted to killing for food, so the strength and amount of their venom is toxic only to their prey. According to the Oakland Zoo, the blue cobalt can go for extended periods of time without food. A swift and aggressive hunter, it preys upon insects, other spiders, amphibians and mice, delivering a paralyzing toxin before dragging the meal back to its burrow to feast.

Like most tarantulas, the blue cobalt molts once or twice per year. Molting is the process by which the tarantula renews its exoskeleton and regenerates missing appendages.

This video from Exotics Lair is a perfect illustration. See how her bad temper makes the rehousing process difficult. The females are known to live up to 30 years in the wild.

Many private keepers report they live as long as 20 years. This species is absolutely an advanced spider. Due to their temperament, they do not make a good pet for beginners or intermediate enthusiasts. They can suddenly bolt out of an enclosure and escape just for being spooked. Just touching or bothering them seems to make them more nervous. They will bite or threaten to bite when approached. See also: 10 best tarantula species for beginners. This sized spider needs a gallon tank enclosure that has a very secure top lid.

Side opening access doors should be escape-proof as well. It should be glass for long-term housing and better viewing conditions. Plastic can scratch too easily over time and will become cloudy.

If you are an advanced keeper the choice of tank is your discretion. With this species being as defensive and prone to escape, the tank choice is more maximum security lock-down scenario kind. You will need to clean this spider terrarium once a month since it likes to burrow. This means the substrate will be more at risk of bacteria from the humidity.

Besides cleaning up the left-over insect bolus, any left-over insects will also try to find a hiding spot. They must be removed since they might carry parasites or mites. This species is also a heavy webber so cleaning out excess webbing will be part of that job too.

If you like to decorate your habitat, there is no end to the extras you can put inside. Half shell coconuts or ceramic hides are nice. You can add real or plastic plants, bark pieces, or even a decorative back wall that is jungle-themed.

This species is not a climber but it might like obstacles it can web-over. It lives in the jungle rainforests of Thailand where the weather is balmy and wet. To get the humidity to continually radiate in the enclosure, add a heating pad outside just under the tank. It should be temperature adjustable. You need to spray the tank daily with water to keep the humidity high enough.

Your spider will also like the temperature nice and warm at F all year long. Females lay to eggs, which hatch in 45 to 60 days in a web. The females do all the jobs such as, protecting the eggs.

If they have the egg sac they might stay with their parents for 3 to 6 days before they disperse. A large amount of premature spiders get caught by predators and end up getting eaten. Then they paralyze the victim with their paralyzing venom. After that, they liquefy the victim with digestive enzymes so they can suck it up with their straw like mouth.

After a huge meal, tarantulas can go without eating for as long as a month. They are native to these countries, but people from all over the world like to buy this tarantula as pets because they're harmless.

They also find this tarantula fascinating especially by the way it eats. Tarantula live wherever there's soil so they can burrow and wait for their prey.

They take hours to make this hole that they can hide in and wait for their prey to come in a secure area where they can get the prey for sure.

The hole they hide fits more than its body, which tells that they spend lots of time digging this hole.



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