A member of the public in Australia has handed in the biggest funnel web spider a reptile park has ever been donated. Hercules, whose fangs could bite through a fingernail, was found in the person ...
Funnel-web spiders make exactly that: webs that look like funnels. They look a bit like the wind socks you see at airports. The entrance to the web is noticeably rounded and our fang-fiend will ...
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Although not all funnel-web spiders pose a threat, many have impressive fangs and produce toxic, fast-acting venom. Of the nearly 40 species, only the Atrax robustus spider has been linked to ...
World-first Australian research is using funnel-web spider venom to protect the heart during heart attacks. The University of Queensland researchers have been granted $17m of federal government ...
A collaborator asked him to analyze a toxin found in the venom of Australia’s deadly funnel-web spider. The work led to clues about the toxin’s function, a paper in Nature Structural and ...
downward-pointing fangs that are easily visible. They also feature prominent spinnerets at the rear, all unmistakable signs that the spider you are looking at is likely a Sydney funnel-web.
A massive funnel-web spider with fangs so long they could bite through a human fingernail has been donated to a lifesaving antivenom program at the Australian Reptile Park. The arachnid has been named ...
This is a funnel-web spider. Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any ...
It’s one of the world’s deadliest spiders, but now researchers expect the funnel-web could save “thousands of lives” after uncovering the untapped power of its venom. In a world-first ...