Skip to main content

Ad

nature-iconNaturenature-iconcreepy crawlies
PUBLISHED

Meet The Many Species Of Freaky Looking "Assassin Spiders" That Only Eat Other Spiders

Don't panic, they are all pretty small.

Eleanor Higgs headshot

Eleanor Higgs

Eleanor Higgs headshot

Eleanor Higgs

Digital Content Creator

Eleanor is a content creator and social media assistant with an undergraduate degree in zoology and a master’s degree in wildlife documentary production.

Digital Content Creator

EditedbyLaura Simmons
Laura Simmons headshot

Laura Simmons

Health & Medicine Editor

Laura is an editor and staff writer at IFLScience. She obtained her Master's in Experimental Neuroscience from Imperial College London.

share94Shares
New species of pelican spider showing the unusual head and "neck"

My what long chelicerae you have? All the better to eat you with!

Image credit: Hannah Wood, Smithsonian

Back in 2018, a bumper crop of new spider assassins was discovered in Madagascar. They represented four new species in the genus Madagascarchaea, as well as 14 new species in the genus Eriauchenius, bringing the total number of species up to six and 20, respectively. 

The rest of this article is behind a paywall. Please sign in or subscribe to access the full content.

These genera belong to a group called Archaeid spiders, also known as the pelican or assassin spiders, which have lived on Earth since the time of the supercontinent Pangea. First discovered through a species trapped in 50-million-year-old amber, the group was once thought to be totally extinct. However, in 1881, pelican spiders were spotted in Madagascar. 

Previously thought to be a very widespread group, they are now mostly extinct; the living spiders are now found mainly in South Africa, Australia, and Madagascar

assassin or pelican spider preying on another smaller spider
Assassin spiders only prey on other spider species.
Image credit: Nikolaj Scharff

These spiders are incredible hunters and do not use webs to catch their prey. Instead they have elongated necks and adapted chelicerae that are extremely long, giving them the appearance of a head and neck, and making them look quite different to other spider species. 

Interestingly, these hunters will only prey on other spider species, using their adapted front appendages and peg teeth to catch them – in a similar way to a pelican catching fish, hence the nickname. “The modified carapace allows for highly maneuverable and elongated chelicerae that can be extended 90° away from the body to attack spider prey at a distance,” explained the authors of the 2018 paper

The new species were discovered in Madagascar in an area of montane rainforest, and were mostly collected from Parc National Ranomafana in central Eastern Madagascar; other species were also obtained from the California Academy of Sciences Collection. 

The authors explained, “[I]n the current study we propose several taxonomic changes: first, the creation of a new genus Madagascarchaea gen. n., which was previously revised as the “gracilicollis group” (Wood 2008); and second, the transfer of several species to different genera. The current paper also performs a taxonomic revision of Eriauchenius, describing 14 new species, and additionally 4 new species of Madagascarchaea gen. n.” 


ARTICLE POSTED IN

nature-iconNaturenature-iconcreepy crawlies
  • tag
  • new species,

  • spiders,

  • Madagascar,

  • morphology,

  • creepy crawlies

FOLLOW ONNEWSGoogele News