|
Omfg!!!
Sept 7, 2005 16:29:53 GMT -5
Post by Dash on Sept 7, 2005 16:29:53 GMT -5
|
|
|
Omfg!!!
Sept 7, 2005 21:53:23 GMT -5
Post by Santa Melty on Sept 7, 2005 21:53:23 GMT -5
I ignored what you said just to be rebellious, but now I’m going to have that image stuck in my head. Aw well. Not that I’m particularly afraid of spiders that size. The smaller ones are much more threatening, as you never know where they may be hiding. Look at that one, eating a frog-like creature in broad daylight. Those larger species lack subtlety. Those’re some huge fangs... although I guess you’d need them to eat such large frog-like creatures... Yes, I keep saying frog-like. I suppose it might be a large lizard, but it’s hard to tell with the top half of its body skewed like that... Actually, it is a lizard. I wrote the above, and then decided to go back and take another look. I then remembered a vital bit of information from some obscure region of my mind; frogs don’t have tails. Good find though. I’ll be sure to flaunt this to some of my spider-hating chums.
|
|
|
Omfg!!!
Sept 7, 2005 22:26:31 GMT -5
Post by pitch on Sept 7, 2005 22:26:31 GMT -5
Oh boy oh boy oh boy!!
Well I totally love spiders, I'd much prefer watching one of the spdiers that lures its prey to its web, wraps the victim in silk, then liquifies it and drinks what's left(something like that anyway). That was pretty neat though.
|
|
|
Omfg!!!
Sept 8, 2005 15:03:30 GMT -5
Post by Dash on Sept 8, 2005 15:03:30 GMT -5
|
|
|
Omfg!!!
Oct 28, 2005 10:19:24 GMT -5
Post by questionmark on Oct 28, 2005 10:19:24 GMT -5
A camel spider isn't actually a spider. The true spiders are in the order Aranidae, but camel spiders are in the order Solifugidae.
|
|