Scorpions as pets

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Scorpions as pets All about scorpions Collection of photos and information about scorpions

8 instar gigantometrus swammerdammi's exuviaeMolting stages.
19/07/2022

8 instar gigantometrus swammerdammi's exuviae

Molting stages.

8 instar heterometrus longimanus' exuviae
19/07/2022

8 instar heterometrus longimanus' exuviae

Pandinus imperator Emperor scorpion 🦂
14/06/2022

Pandinus imperator
Emperor scorpion 🦂

Opistophthalmus glabrifronsCommon names:Known sometimes as "Shiny burrowing scorpions" or "Yellowlegged creeping scorpio...
14/06/2022

Opistophthalmus glabrifrons

Common names:
Known sometimes as "Shiny burrowing scorpions" or "Yellowlegged creeping scorpions".

Distribution:
Africa (Botswana, Mozambique, South Africa, Tanzania, Zimbabwe).

Habitat:
You want to keep them in a desert environment, very low humidity.
They live in a arid grassland environment, composite sand tamped, not communal, low humidity and love to burrow. semi desert/grassland/Savannah type living conditions.

This scorpion is known from dry areas with different temperature regimes (in areas with occational frost to areas with temperatures over 40 degrees). Its distrubution appears to be determined by soil hardness rather than soil type. Sandy soil seem to be avoided because this soild type makes it difficult to burrow.

Venom:
Little data known, but sting is probably moderate painful. This species has no medical significance for healthy humans (an anecdontal source says that the venom can have unpleseant systemic effects, but this has not been verified). This species will sting readilly, and has very powerful pincers which can pinch very painful.

General:
This species is a medium-sized, have-built scorpion with large pedipalps. Varying color, but usually yellow-brown to rust-brown. The pedipalps, legs, metasoma (tail) and telson are lighter in color than trunk and the posterior part of the carapace. The adult size of this species is 9-11.5 cm. Males in this species have longer and thicker metasomas (tails) and a more elongated pedipalp hand.

This species are known to stridulate (making a hissing sound) loudly when disturbed. The sound is made when the scorpion is rubbing its chelicerae together. All scorpions in the genus Opistophthalmus stridulate.

The burrows of this scorpion are often constructed with a shallow scrape under a rock that leads to the burrow. The burrows vary from 10 mm to 1 metre deep, and can sometimes run to a lenght of 1.5 metres. The burroes often spural anticlockwise as they decend. Burrows in softer soil is usually shorter than burrows in harder soil. The mouthparts are used for breaking up the soil.

This species is kept in captivity. Captive breeding from wild caught females has been reported, but mating in captivity seems difficult. This species has a slow growth rate.

Can reach 115 mm. (4 ½ inches.)
They are not communal.
They can stridulate and have a slow growth rate.
Body and color dark brown marble slightly paler brown carapace. Pedipalps, ambulatory legs, metasoma and gall of a Brown clearer than the body, fingertips of pedipalps, chelicerae, attach legs hulls and telson of a darker Brown has dark chocolate.
These scorpions have an incredible feeding response.

boodle fight :)
28/05/2022

boodle fight :)

Animal Mating: How Scorpions Do ItBetween their pincers and venomous stingers, scorpions are formidable arachnids that f...
19/04/2022

Animal Mating: How Scorpions Do It

Between their pincers and venomous stingers, scorpions are formidable arachnids that few people would volunteer to tangle with. But for two scorpions looking to mate, "tango" is absolutely necessary. So just how do scorpions do it?

Scientists have identified about 2,200 species of scorpions across the globe, though the biology is only known for about 50 to 60 species.

Given this extensive family tree, it should come as no surprise that there are a number of distinctive behaviors across species. But scorpion mating behaviors do share some general characteristics.

Mating among scorpions is associated with seasonal periods, with those animals living in temperate regions typically mating in the spring or summer and those in tropical regions mating during the rainy season.

During these sexually active periods, male scorpions use pheromones (chemical cues) to search for females.

If two or more males stumble upon one another while hunting for mates, they may get into skirmishes. But this is unlikely to happen often in the wild and is generally a phenomenon related to captivity.

Many scorpion populations are so scarce that few individuals will meet in the field.

Scientists know very little about scorpion sexual selection — that is, which qualities the arachnids find attractive and how sexually active individuals choose their mates. In some populations in which males come in various sizes, the males of a "normal" size may have more reproductive success.

Whatever the case, once a male and female find each other and decide to mate, they engage in a complex courtship ritual called a "promenade à deux."

For this dance, the male will grab the female's pincers, or pedipalp chelae, with this own. He will then lead his dancing partner around as he searches for a suitable spot to deposit his s***matophore, or s***m packet.

In some cases, the female may resist the male's smooth moves by refusing to dance, trying to push him away, or even trying to sting him.

The male may try to appease her with a "kiss," in which he grasps her chelicerae (pincer-like mouthparts) with his own. In at least one species, Megacormus gertschi, the male may sting the female in a soft part of her body, leaving his stinger in the female for up to nine minutes; it's unknown if he's actually injecting her with venom or some other substance to try to pacify her.

Once the male deposits his s***matophore, he leads the female over it so that she can take it up into her ge***al opening.

In all, courtship and mating normally lasts from 2–3 to 10–15 minutes. Researchers have documented much longer periods in captivity but these cases were due to having improper substrate conditions (males couldn't find suitable spots for their s***matophores).

Deed done, the pair halts their dance and goes their separate ways.

Sexual cannibalism does sometimes occur (with the female attacking and eating the male), but this generally only occurs in species in which cannibalism is a normal part of "population regulation," where the animals live in high densities and potentially see each other as prey. This temperament is rare, and some scorpions even show some social behavior, such as sharing burrows and food.

Interestingly, some species of scorpions also reproduce via parthenogenesis, in which the o**m develops without fertilization (no sexual activity required).

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