common name: huntsman spider
scientific name: Heteropoda venatoria (Linnaeus) (Arachnida: Araneae: Sparassidae)
The huntsman spider, Heteropoda venatoria (L.), sometimes called the giant crab spider or the
banana spider (due to its occasional appearance in marketed bananas), is a cosmotropical
species introduced into and now occurring in the U.S., in subtropical areas of Florida, Texas,
and California. It is presumed to have been introduced from Asia, where many of its closest
relatives live (Gertsch 1948). It has sometimes been mistaken for a large brown recluse
(Loxosceles reclusa Gertsch and Mulaik, family Loxoscelidae), a poisonous spider, but it is
neither related nor is it dangerous. Some authors place this spider in the family
Heteropodidae, due to the uncertainty of the name Sparassidae (Platnick and Levi 1973).
male
brown recluse spider
Aranea venatoria Linnaeus 1767
Aranea regia Fabricius 1793
Heteropoda venatoria, Latreille 1804
Thomisus leucosia Walckenaer 1805
Micrommata setulosa Perty 1833
Heteropoda venatoria is a large brown spider with a flattened body structure and very little
dorsal pattern. Adult specimens have a body length of 2.2 to 2.8 cm (about 1 inch), and have
a leg span of 7 to 12 cm (3 to 5 inches). Adult females have a larger body size, especially the
abdomen, than males. Adult males have longer legs than females, and the long male palpi
have the terminal segment enlarged and the ventral sclerites exposed, as in most true spiders.
Both sexes have a yellow to cream clypeus and a wide marginal band encircling the rest of the
carapace, tan in females and cream in males. In addition, males have a dark, longitudinal
stripe on the abdomen and a light-bordered pale area behind the eyes. The legs of both sexes
have distinct black spots from each of which arises an erectile macroseta. Otherwise, the
spider is not conspicuously hairy.
Females of H. venatoria make flattened, disc-like eggsacs about 1.5 cm in diameter which
contain over 200 eggs. The eggsac is carried under the body, its size and shape probably
causing the female to remain relatively immotile. All stages of development of juveniles and
adults appear to occur simultaneously throughout the year.
This and similar species are highly valued in tropical countries because they capture and feed
on cockroaches and other domestic insect pests. As with other vagrant spiders, huntsman
spiders do not use webs to capture prey. Their great speed and strong chelicerae (mouthparts)
are used to capture the insects on which they feed. Poison is also injected into the prey from
glands extending from the chelicerae into the cephalothorax.
The flattened body enables this large spider to fit into surprisingly small cracks and crevices.
This ability, along with its adaptability to human habitations, helps explain its frequent
occurrence in houses, barns, sheds, under boards on the ground, and in other sheltered areas.
Being cold-sensitive, these spiders cannot exist outdoors in areas with freezing winter
temperatures; occasionally they occur in greenhouses and other heated buildings in temperate
climates. On the other hand, in southern Florida where frost is rare, these spiders have
become "wild" (i.e., no longer requiring man-made structures). In the Homestead area, H.
venatoria is now established in the "wild" and is common in avocado groves (Whitcomb
unpublished). They can be easily collected at night by using a headlight (Wallace 1937) as
their eyes reflect light, appearing as blue spots on the trunks of trees and on the ground, much
like wolf spiders.
In Florida, H. venatoria may be distinguished from other large, cursorial spiders by its
flattened brown body and the black spots around the macrosetae on the legs. In warm
weather, it may be found in and about human habitations; in cold weather it will be found
indoors, under furniture or cabinets, behind wall hangings, and in closets and garages. It is
not a dangerous spider, but a locally painful bite can be delivered to any human who carelessly
handles a huntsman spider.
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Gertsch WJ. 1948. American Spiders. D. Van Nostrand Co., Inc., New York. 284 p.
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Platnick NI, Levi HW. 1974. On names of spiders. British Arachnology Society Bulletin 2: 166-167.
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Wallace HK. 1937. The use of a headlight in collecting nocturnal spiders. Entomological News 48:
160-161.
Author: G.B. Edwards, Jr., Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Division of Plant Industry.
Originally published as DPI Entomology Circular 205.
Photographs: Jeffrey Lotz, Division of Plant Industry
Project Coordinator: Thomas R. Fasulo, University of Florida
Publication Number: EENY-160
Publication Date: October 2000. Latest revision: July 2003.
Copyright 2000-2003 University of Florida
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Department of Entomology and Nematology
Division of Plant Industry
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