Quote:
Originally Posted by Tone
lol, i know right! that's what i was thinking...
...probably should be tied up with the 'polar bear'
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tone
lol, i know right! that's what i was thinking...
...probably should be tied up with the 'polar bear'
RK, you forgot the #1 Deadliest Animal, here I'll help you out:
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Oh WOW, yeah that makes sense! We do a lot of killing. We sentence people to death. In some parts of the world, we hang and stone people.Quote:
Originally Posted by Tone
Thx for pointing that out Tone, you are quite right!
I fought all those animals... and won.
What makes those animals the "most deadly"? The actual number of human deaths caused by them per year?
yea im sure there must be something deadlier than that ... i mean is that ALL we have on earth , the deathliest is a ...frog . where are the demon knights when you need them ?
No LV - the frog was number 10. The mosquito was number one, which I believe. I don't know about the rest, though. I don't remember ever reading about a jellyfish death or a poison frog death in the newspaper, although I know it is possible.
I would have thought that the Lion would pwn all but I think this is taken on human lifes lost because I know that those Buffalos take lots of human life, I forgot were at though.
yea maybe when there was indians running along america ...OV i HATE that part in HL2 ... i cant stand it and im stuck there .
where's the hippo? I thought they were responsible for the most human deaths each year?
They do cause alot, thats odd too.Quote:
Originally Posted by NeoSeminole
LoL wrong type of buffalo. That part is so easy, how can you be stuck there?, those machines prevent the bugs from reaching you. Just stay in the buggy and drive fast.Quote:
Originally Posted by Late_vamp
So, they're only deadly if they kill humans? What about all those millions of mosquitos killed by bats every day?
What about the "daddy-long-legger" they are the most poisonous spiders on the planet... their fangs are too small to pennetrate human flesh tho...
:nerd:
Correction : [url]http://spiders.ucr.edu/daddylonglegs.html[/url]Quote:
Originally Posted by dono
Quote:
DADDY-LONGLEGS ARE ONE OF THE MOST POISONOUS SPIDERS BUT THEIR FANGS ARE TOO SHORT TO BITE HUMANS
This tale has been lurking around for years. I have heard it repeatedly in the United States and even heard a schoolteacher misinforming her class at a museum in Brisbane, Australia. This is incorrect, but to clarify it, several points need to be explained first.
The animals
Most folks who retell this tale have no idea that they are referring to two completely separate groups of animals: "daddy-longlegs" and "daddy-longlegs spiders". In the animal class Arachnida, there are several lower level divisions called Orders. Scorpions are in the Order Scorpiones, spiders are in the Order Araneae, ticks and mites are in the Order Acari.
The creatures most correctly called daddy-longlegs are in their own separate Order which is Opiliones. Common names for this Order are 1) daddy-longlegs, 2) harvestmen and 3) opilionids. They are characterized by having one basic body segment which shows segmentation on the posterior portion, at most 2 eyes and all 8 legs attach to the pill-like body segment. They are usually found under logs and rocks, prefer moist habitat although they can be found in the desert, often have long flexible legs (in the temperate Northern hemisphere but there are also short-legged daddy-longlegs) and they do not produce silk so therefore they are never found in webs unless they are being eaten by spiders. Because they are found under logs and other stuff which people most often are not turning over, most folks don't run into daddy-longlegs very often.
Another creature often called daddy-longlegs are actually spiders. These long-legged spiders are in the family Pholcidae. Previously the common name of this family was the cellar spiders but arachnologists have also given them the moniker of "daddy-longlegs spiders" because of the confusion generated by the general public. Because these arachnids are spiders, they have 2 body basic body parts (cephalothorax and abdomen), have 8 eyes most often clumped together in the front of the body, the abdomen shows no evidence of segmentation, have 8 legs all attached to the front most body part (the cephalothorax) and make webs out of silk. This is most probably the animal to which people refer when they tell the tale because these spiders are plentiful especially in cellars (hence their common name) and are commonly seen by the general public. The most common pholcid spiders found in U.S. homes are both European immigrants. Pholcus phalangioides is a uniformly grey spider with rectangular, elongate abdomen and is found throughout the U.S. Holocnemus pluchei also has a rectangular, elongate abdomen but has a brown stripe on the ventral side (the belly side - which is typically directed upwards since the spider hangs upside down in its web) which covers its sternum and is a stripe on the abdomen. These spiders are very common along the Pacific Coast. and into the southwest deserts.
Possible envenomation
Is there any truth to this oft-repeated tale?
Daddy-longlegs (Opiliones) - these arachnids make their living by eating decomposing vegetative and animal matter although are opportunist predators if they can get away with it. They do not have venom glands, fangs or any other mechanism for chemically subduing their food. Therefore, they do not have poison and, by the powers of logic, cannot be poisonous from venom. Some have defensive secretions that might be poisonous to small animals if ingested. So, for these daddy-long-legs, the tale is clearly false.
Daddy-longlegs spiders (Pholcidae) - Here, the myth is incorrect at least in making claims that have no basis in known facts. There is no reference to any pholcid spider biting a human and causing any detrimental reaction. If these spiders were indeed deadly poisonous but couldn't bite humans, then the only way we would know that they are poisonous is by milking them and injecting the venom into humans. For a variety of reasons including Amnesty International and a humanitarian code of ethics, this research has never been done. Furthermore, there are no toxicological studies testing the lethality of pholcid venom on any mammalian system (this is usually done with mice). Therefore, no information is available on the likely toxic effects of their venom in humans, so the part of the myth about their being especially poisonous is just that: a myth. There is no scientific basis for the supposition that they are deadly poisonous and there is no reason to assume that it is true.
What about their fangs being too short to penetrate human skin? Pholcids do indeed have short fangs, which in arachnological terms is called "uncate" because they have a secondary tooth which meets the fang like the way the two grabbing parts of a pair of tongs come together. Brown recluse spiders similarly have uncate fang structure and they obviously are able to bite humans. There may be a difference in the musculature that houses the fang such that recluses have stronger muscles for penetration because they are hunting spiders needing to subdue prey whereas pholcid spiders are able to wrap their prey and don't need as strong a musculature. So, again, the myth states as fact something about which there is no scientific basis.
In summary
For true daddy-long-legs, the opilionids, the myth is certainly false, and for the daddy-long-legs spiders it is certainly not based on known facts.