Are spiders unable to hurt humans, especially very small spiders? The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InIs Australian fauna more dangerous?Are humans the only species to have homophobes?Are (wild) elephants afraid of mice?Did humans see fish at the bottom of the world's deepest trench, the Mariana trench?Can trained humans run faster than all other animals on a marathon distance?Is the total biomass of ants roughly equal to the total biomass of humans?Are 100 million sharks killed by humans per year?Are any animals nocturnal?Is it very difficult to kill a whale at sea humanely?Are these photos strong evidence of mermaids?Are chicken haunches especially toxic?

"as much details as you can remember"

What are the motivations for publishing new editions of an existing textbook, beyond new discoveries in a field?

Protecting Dualbooting Windows from dangerous code (like rm -rf)

Right tool to dig six foot holes?

What is the meaning of the verb "bear" in this context?

Can you compress metal and what would be the consequences?

Is this app Icon Browser Safe/Legit?

Falsification in Math vs Science

Can someone be penalized for an "unlawful" act if no penalty is specified?

How come people say “Would of”?

When should I buy a clipper card after flying to OAK?

Apparent duplicates between Haynes service instructions and MOT

What to do when moving next to a bird sanctuary with a loosely-domesticated cat?

Are there any other methods to apply to solving simultaneous equations?

Are there incongruent pythagorean triangles with the same perimeter and same area?

Is bread bad for ducks?

How to save as into a customized destination on macOS?

Why hard-Brexiteers don't insist on a hard border to prevent illegal immigration after Brexit?

Is there any way to tell whether the shot is going to hit you or not?

What is the most effective way of iterating a std::vector and why?

Where to refill my bottle in India?

Identify boardgame from Big movie

Button changing it's text & action. Good or terrible?

How are circuits which use complex ICs normally simulated?



Are spiders unable to hurt humans, especially very small spiders?



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InIs Australian fauna more dangerous?Are humans the only species to have homophobes?Are (wild) elephants afraid of mice?Did humans see fish at the bottom of the world's deepest trench, the Mariana trench?Can trained humans run faster than all other animals on a marathon distance?Is the total biomass of ants roughly equal to the total biomass of humans?Are 100 million sharks killed by humans per year?Are any animals nocturnal?Is it very difficult to kill a whale at sea humanely?Are these photos strong evidence of mermaids?Are chicken haunches especially toxic?










1















In an episode of Peppa Pig, one of the characters says that spiders are very very small, and that they can’t hurt you.



Broadcasters in Australia have avoided broadcasting the episode involved, because they’re worried that viewers will regard the claim as factually true.



Are spiders unable to hurt people? Also, does size have anything to do with whether they can harm you?



I’m primarily interested in whether spiders are harmful to humans, not whether they can affect pigs, and I’m interested in whether it’s true in all countries, though if it’s untrue worldwide, I’d like to know if it is at least true in the country Peppa Pig was created in (the UK), as opposed to the deathworld which is Australia.










share|improve this question




























    1















    In an episode of Peppa Pig, one of the characters says that spiders are very very small, and that they can’t hurt you.



    Broadcasters in Australia have avoided broadcasting the episode involved, because they’re worried that viewers will regard the claim as factually true.



    Are spiders unable to hurt people? Also, does size have anything to do with whether they can harm you?



    I’m primarily interested in whether spiders are harmful to humans, not whether they can affect pigs, and I’m interested in whether it’s true in all countries, though if it’s untrue worldwide, I’d like to know if it is at least true in the country Peppa Pig was created in (the UK), as opposed to the deathworld which is Australia.










    share|improve this question


























      1












      1








      1








      In an episode of Peppa Pig, one of the characters says that spiders are very very small, and that they can’t hurt you.



      Broadcasters in Australia have avoided broadcasting the episode involved, because they’re worried that viewers will regard the claim as factually true.



      Are spiders unable to hurt people? Also, does size have anything to do with whether they can harm you?



      I’m primarily interested in whether spiders are harmful to humans, not whether they can affect pigs, and I’m interested in whether it’s true in all countries, though if it’s untrue worldwide, I’d like to know if it is at least true in the country Peppa Pig was created in (the UK), as opposed to the deathworld which is Australia.










      share|improve this question
















      In an episode of Peppa Pig, one of the characters says that spiders are very very small, and that they can’t hurt you.



      Broadcasters in Australia have avoided broadcasting the episode involved, because they’re worried that viewers will regard the claim as factually true.



      Are spiders unable to hurt people? Also, does size have anything to do with whether they can harm you?



      I’m primarily interested in whether spiders are harmful to humans, not whether they can affect pigs, and I’m interested in whether it’s true in all countries, though if it’s untrue worldwide, I’d like to know if it is at least true in the country Peppa Pig was created in (the UK), as opposed to the deathworld which is Australia.







      zoology toxicology






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 38 mins ago









      Oddthinking

      102k31427531




      102k31427531










      asked 3 hours ago









      Andrew GrimmAndrew Grimm

      21.8k27105299




      21.8k27105299




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          4














          The answer is that spiders definitely can hurt you. While you may not be likely to be killed, spiders can absolutely hurt you, whether from a large one's bite (whether venomous or not) or from any venomous spider.



          Australia is probably the best case here, and while they have only had one death from spider bite in 40 years (from a redback bite) this is considered to be mostly because:




          an effective antivenom for redback spiders was developed in 1956, and one for funnel-web spiders in 1980.




          from australianmuseum.net.au



          Also on that page:




          ...on current evidence the most dangerous spiders in the world are funnel-web spiders (Atrax and Hadronyche species), Redback Spiders and their relations (Latrodectus species), Banana Spiders (Phoneutria species) and Recluse Spiders (Loxosceles species). In Australia, only male Sydney Funnel Web Spiders and Redback Spiders have caused human deaths, but none have occurred since antivenoms were made available in 1981.




          In the UK (from sciencefocus.com):




          three common spiders that are capable of biting you: the cellar spider, the woodlouse spider and the false widow spider. Their bites are painful and have been known to cause swelling for a few hours. In 2014 a 60-year-old woman died after being bitten by a false widow spider.




          The false widow, cellar, woodlouse and redback are all pretty small, at around 1cm. A funnel-web can be up to about 5cm, so that probably doesn't count as small



          Anecdotally, my son was bitten by a false widow in the summer of 2018 in Scotland, and after falling very ill and having his entire forearm swell up, with the central bite area becoming necrotic, he required emergency treatment, was in hospital for surgery, and a few days stay in the plastic surgery ward at St. Johns Hospital in Livingston. He still has a rather nasty scar on his arm, but thus far has not developed any strange powers...






          share|improve this answer

























          • I think you have the sense of the question backwards. The question asks in the title "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" and in the body "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" A positive answer (i.e., your initial "Yes") says that spiders are incapable of hurting people. The rest of your answer properly answers in the negative. Some spiders are quite capable of harming or possibly even killing people.

            – David Hammen
            2 hours ago







          • 1





            the title is actually weirder than that - the wording implication is around whether they can stop themselves hurting you :-)

            – Rory Alsop
            2 hours ago











          • Fixed it @DavidHammen - updated my post, and edited the question title

            – Rory Alsop
            2 hours ago











          • Just to be clear, the last paragraph is an anecdote, and hence not strong evidence that spider bites can't give people strange superpowers.

            – Oddthinking
            36 mins ago











          • @Oddthinking: LOL.

            – Fizz
            20 mins ago


















          3















          Are spiders unable to hurt people?




          There are several species of spiders, some large, others not so large. that are quite capable of harming people. Some can cause severe injury to or kill people. Three requirements:



          • The fangs need to be large enough to puncture the epidermis.

            The human epidermis is thick enough to render what otherwise would be harmful small creatures impotent with regard to humans.

          • The injected poison needs to be potentially harmful to people.

            Some spiders inject poisons that are very harmful to insects but have little impact on humans. But other spiders inject poisons that are potentially harmful to all animal life.

          • The amount of poison injected needs to be potentially harmful to people.

            A spider that injects a tiny amount of what would deadly poison in much larger amounts is not harmful. The dosage makes the poison poisonous.

          Some spiders pass all three requirements. People have died or lost appendages due to spider bites. Australia appears to be the worst place, but very poisonous spiders do exist elsewhere. The Americas, for example, are home to several species of spiders that can be quite harmful to people, and even on occasion can kill. From Spider: This Bites: Venomous Texas Spiders,




          The venom of the black widow is a neurotoxin and can lead to severe systemic reactions and in rare cases, death. The black widow's venom is reportedly 15 times more toxic than the venom of the prairie rattlesnake. However, only a minute quantity is injected with each bite.




          and




          Brown recluse spiders are golden brown in color and can be identified by the characteristic dark brown to black fiddle-shaped pattern on the head region. Brown recluse venom has necrotizing enzymes that generally cause local or systemic reactions.




          Black widows are largish (but not huge) spiders, brown recluses, not so large.






          share|improve this answer
































            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes








            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            4














            The answer is that spiders definitely can hurt you. While you may not be likely to be killed, spiders can absolutely hurt you, whether from a large one's bite (whether venomous or not) or from any venomous spider.



            Australia is probably the best case here, and while they have only had one death from spider bite in 40 years (from a redback bite) this is considered to be mostly because:




            an effective antivenom for redback spiders was developed in 1956, and one for funnel-web spiders in 1980.




            from australianmuseum.net.au



            Also on that page:




            ...on current evidence the most dangerous spiders in the world are funnel-web spiders (Atrax and Hadronyche species), Redback Spiders and their relations (Latrodectus species), Banana Spiders (Phoneutria species) and Recluse Spiders (Loxosceles species). In Australia, only male Sydney Funnel Web Spiders and Redback Spiders have caused human deaths, but none have occurred since antivenoms were made available in 1981.




            In the UK (from sciencefocus.com):




            three common spiders that are capable of biting you: the cellar spider, the woodlouse spider and the false widow spider. Their bites are painful and have been known to cause swelling for a few hours. In 2014 a 60-year-old woman died after being bitten by a false widow spider.




            The false widow, cellar, woodlouse and redback are all pretty small, at around 1cm. A funnel-web can be up to about 5cm, so that probably doesn't count as small



            Anecdotally, my son was bitten by a false widow in the summer of 2018 in Scotland, and after falling very ill and having his entire forearm swell up, with the central bite area becoming necrotic, he required emergency treatment, was in hospital for surgery, and a few days stay in the plastic surgery ward at St. Johns Hospital in Livingston. He still has a rather nasty scar on his arm, but thus far has not developed any strange powers...






            share|improve this answer

























            • I think you have the sense of the question backwards. The question asks in the title "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" and in the body "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" A positive answer (i.e., your initial "Yes") says that spiders are incapable of hurting people. The rest of your answer properly answers in the negative. Some spiders are quite capable of harming or possibly even killing people.

              – David Hammen
              2 hours ago







            • 1





              the title is actually weirder than that - the wording implication is around whether they can stop themselves hurting you :-)

              – Rory Alsop
              2 hours ago











            • Fixed it @DavidHammen - updated my post, and edited the question title

              – Rory Alsop
              2 hours ago











            • Just to be clear, the last paragraph is an anecdote, and hence not strong evidence that spider bites can't give people strange superpowers.

              – Oddthinking
              36 mins ago











            • @Oddthinking: LOL.

              – Fizz
              20 mins ago















            4














            The answer is that spiders definitely can hurt you. While you may not be likely to be killed, spiders can absolutely hurt you, whether from a large one's bite (whether venomous or not) or from any venomous spider.



            Australia is probably the best case here, and while they have only had one death from spider bite in 40 years (from a redback bite) this is considered to be mostly because:




            an effective antivenom for redback spiders was developed in 1956, and one for funnel-web spiders in 1980.




            from australianmuseum.net.au



            Also on that page:




            ...on current evidence the most dangerous spiders in the world are funnel-web spiders (Atrax and Hadronyche species), Redback Spiders and their relations (Latrodectus species), Banana Spiders (Phoneutria species) and Recluse Spiders (Loxosceles species). In Australia, only male Sydney Funnel Web Spiders and Redback Spiders have caused human deaths, but none have occurred since antivenoms were made available in 1981.




            In the UK (from sciencefocus.com):




            three common spiders that are capable of biting you: the cellar spider, the woodlouse spider and the false widow spider. Their bites are painful and have been known to cause swelling for a few hours. In 2014 a 60-year-old woman died after being bitten by a false widow spider.




            The false widow, cellar, woodlouse and redback are all pretty small, at around 1cm. A funnel-web can be up to about 5cm, so that probably doesn't count as small



            Anecdotally, my son was bitten by a false widow in the summer of 2018 in Scotland, and after falling very ill and having his entire forearm swell up, with the central bite area becoming necrotic, he required emergency treatment, was in hospital for surgery, and a few days stay in the plastic surgery ward at St. Johns Hospital in Livingston. He still has a rather nasty scar on his arm, but thus far has not developed any strange powers...






            share|improve this answer

























            • I think you have the sense of the question backwards. The question asks in the title "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" and in the body "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" A positive answer (i.e., your initial "Yes") says that spiders are incapable of hurting people. The rest of your answer properly answers in the negative. Some spiders are quite capable of harming or possibly even killing people.

              – David Hammen
              2 hours ago







            • 1





              the title is actually weirder than that - the wording implication is around whether they can stop themselves hurting you :-)

              – Rory Alsop
              2 hours ago











            • Fixed it @DavidHammen - updated my post, and edited the question title

              – Rory Alsop
              2 hours ago











            • Just to be clear, the last paragraph is an anecdote, and hence not strong evidence that spider bites can't give people strange superpowers.

              – Oddthinking
              36 mins ago











            • @Oddthinking: LOL.

              – Fizz
              20 mins ago













            4












            4








            4







            The answer is that spiders definitely can hurt you. While you may not be likely to be killed, spiders can absolutely hurt you, whether from a large one's bite (whether venomous or not) or from any venomous spider.



            Australia is probably the best case here, and while they have only had one death from spider bite in 40 years (from a redback bite) this is considered to be mostly because:




            an effective antivenom for redback spiders was developed in 1956, and one for funnel-web spiders in 1980.




            from australianmuseum.net.au



            Also on that page:




            ...on current evidence the most dangerous spiders in the world are funnel-web spiders (Atrax and Hadronyche species), Redback Spiders and their relations (Latrodectus species), Banana Spiders (Phoneutria species) and Recluse Spiders (Loxosceles species). In Australia, only male Sydney Funnel Web Spiders and Redback Spiders have caused human deaths, but none have occurred since antivenoms were made available in 1981.




            In the UK (from sciencefocus.com):




            three common spiders that are capable of biting you: the cellar spider, the woodlouse spider and the false widow spider. Their bites are painful and have been known to cause swelling for a few hours. In 2014 a 60-year-old woman died after being bitten by a false widow spider.




            The false widow, cellar, woodlouse and redback are all pretty small, at around 1cm. A funnel-web can be up to about 5cm, so that probably doesn't count as small



            Anecdotally, my son was bitten by a false widow in the summer of 2018 in Scotland, and after falling very ill and having his entire forearm swell up, with the central bite area becoming necrotic, he required emergency treatment, was in hospital for surgery, and a few days stay in the plastic surgery ward at St. Johns Hospital in Livingston. He still has a rather nasty scar on his arm, but thus far has not developed any strange powers...






            share|improve this answer















            The answer is that spiders definitely can hurt you. While you may not be likely to be killed, spiders can absolutely hurt you, whether from a large one's bite (whether venomous or not) or from any venomous spider.



            Australia is probably the best case here, and while they have only had one death from spider bite in 40 years (from a redback bite) this is considered to be mostly because:




            an effective antivenom for redback spiders was developed in 1956, and one for funnel-web spiders in 1980.




            from australianmuseum.net.au



            Also on that page:




            ...on current evidence the most dangerous spiders in the world are funnel-web spiders (Atrax and Hadronyche species), Redback Spiders and their relations (Latrodectus species), Banana Spiders (Phoneutria species) and Recluse Spiders (Loxosceles species). In Australia, only male Sydney Funnel Web Spiders and Redback Spiders have caused human deaths, but none have occurred since antivenoms were made available in 1981.




            In the UK (from sciencefocus.com):




            three common spiders that are capable of biting you: the cellar spider, the woodlouse spider and the false widow spider. Their bites are painful and have been known to cause swelling for a few hours. In 2014 a 60-year-old woman died after being bitten by a false widow spider.




            The false widow, cellar, woodlouse and redback are all pretty small, at around 1cm. A funnel-web can be up to about 5cm, so that probably doesn't count as small



            Anecdotally, my son was bitten by a false widow in the summer of 2018 in Scotland, and after falling very ill and having his entire forearm swell up, with the central bite area becoming necrotic, he required emergency treatment, was in hospital for surgery, and a few days stay in the plastic surgery ward at St. Johns Hospital in Livingston. He still has a rather nasty scar on his arm, but thus far has not developed any strange powers...







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 2 hours ago

























            answered 2 hours ago









            Rory AlsopRory Alsop

            4,60722541




            4,60722541












            • I think you have the sense of the question backwards. The question asks in the title "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" and in the body "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" A positive answer (i.e., your initial "Yes") says that spiders are incapable of hurting people. The rest of your answer properly answers in the negative. Some spiders are quite capable of harming or possibly even killing people.

              – David Hammen
              2 hours ago







            • 1





              the title is actually weirder than that - the wording implication is around whether they can stop themselves hurting you :-)

              – Rory Alsop
              2 hours ago











            • Fixed it @DavidHammen - updated my post, and edited the question title

              – Rory Alsop
              2 hours ago











            • Just to be clear, the last paragraph is an anecdote, and hence not strong evidence that spider bites can't give people strange superpowers.

              – Oddthinking
              36 mins ago











            • @Oddthinking: LOL.

              – Fizz
              20 mins ago

















            • I think you have the sense of the question backwards. The question asks in the title "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" and in the body "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" A positive answer (i.e., your initial "Yes") says that spiders are incapable of hurting people. The rest of your answer properly answers in the negative. Some spiders are quite capable of harming or possibly even killing people.

              – David Hammen
              2 hours ago







            • 1





              the title is actually weirder than that - the wording implication is around whether they can stop themselves hurting you :-)

              – Rory Alsop
              2 hours ago











            • Fixed it @DavidHammen - updated my post, and edited the question title

              – Rory Alsop
              2 hours ago











            • Just to be clear, the last paragraph is an anecdote, and hence not strong evidence that spider bites can't give people strange superpowers.

              – Oddthinking
              36 mins ago











            • @Oddthinking: LOL.

              – Fizz
              20 mins ago
















            I think you have the sense of the question backwards. The question asks in the title "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" and in the body "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" A positive answer (i.e., your initial "Yes") says that spiders are incapable of hurting people. The rest of your answer properly answers in the negative. Some spiders are quite capable of harming or possibly even killing people.

            – David Hammen
            2 hours ago






            I think you have the sense of the question backwards. The question asks in the title "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" and in the body "Are spiders unable to hurt people?" A positive answer (i.e., your initial "Yes") says that spiders are incapable of hurting people. The rest of your answer properly answers in the negative. Some spiders are quite capable of harming or possibly even killing people.

            – David Hammen
            2 hours ago





            1




            1





            the title is actually weirder than that - the wording implication is around whether they can stop themselves hurting you :-)

            – Rory Alsop
            2 hours ago





            the title is actually weirder than that - the wording implication is around whether they can stop themselves hurting you :-)

            – Rory Alsop
            2 hours ago













            Fixed it @DavidHammen - updated my post, and edited the question title

            – Rory Alsop
            2 hours ago





            Fixed it @DavidHammen - updated my post, and edited the question title

            – Rory Alsop
            2 hours ago













            Just to be clear, the last paragraph is an anecdote, and hence not strong evidence that spider bites can't give people strange superpowers.

            – Oddthinking
            36 mins ago





            Just to be clear, the last paragraph is an anecdote, and hence not strong evidence that spider bites can't give people strange superpowers.

            – Oddthinking
            36 mins ago













            @Oddthinking: LOL.

            – Fizz
            20 mins ago





            @Oddthinking: LOL.

            – Fizz
            20 mins ago











            3















            Are spiders unable to hurt people?




            There are several species of spiders, some large, others not so large. that are quite capable of harming people. Some can cause severe injury to or kill people. Three requirements:



            • The fangs need to be large enough to puncture the epidermis.

              The human epidermis is thick enough to render what otherwise would be harmful small creatures impotent with regard to humans.

            • The injected poison needs to be potentially harmful to people.

              Some spiders inject poisons that are very harmful to insects but have little impact on humans. But other spiders inject poisons that are potentially harmful to all animal life.

            • The amount of poison injected needs to be potentially harmful to people.

              A spider that injects a tiny amount of what would deadly poison in much larger amounts is not harmful. The dosage makes the poison poisonous.

            Some spiders pass all three requirements. People have died or lost appendages due to spider bites. Australia appears to be the worst place, but very poisonous spiders do exist elsewhere. The Americas, for example, are home to several species of spiders that can be quite harmful to people, and even on occasion can kill. From Spider: This Bites: Venomous Texas Spiders,




            The venom of the black widow is a neurotoxin and can lead to severe systemic reactions and in rare cases, death. The black widow's venom is reportedly 15 times more toxic than the venom of the prairie rattlesnake. However, only a minute quantity is injected with each bite.




            and




            Brown recluse spiders are golden brown in color and can be identified by the characteristic dark brown to black fiddle-shaped pattern on the head region. Brown recluse venom has necrotizing enzymes that generally cause local or systemic reactions.




            Black widows are largish (but not huge) spiders, brown recluses, not so large.






            share|improve this answer





























              3















              Are spiders unable to hurt people?




              There are several species of spiders, some large, others not so large. that are quite capable of harming people. Some can cause severe injury to or kill people. Three requirements:



              • The fangs need to be large enough to puncture the epidermis.

                The human epidermis is thick enough to render what otherwise would be harmful small creatures impotent with regard to humans.

              • The injected poison needs to be potentially harmful to people.

                Some spiders inject poisons that are very harmful to insects but have little impact on humans. But other spiders inject poisons that are potentially harmful to all animal life.

              • The amount of poison injected needs to be potentially harmful to people.

                A spider that injects a tiny amount of what would deadly poison in much larger amounts is not harmful. The dosage makes the poison poisonous.

              Some spiders pass all three requirements. People have died or lost appendages due to spider bites. Australia appears to be the worst place, but very poisonous spiders do exist elsewhere. The Americas, for example, are home to several species of spiders that can be quite harmful to people, and even on occasion can kill. From Spider: This Bites: Venomous Texas Spiders,




              The venom of the black widow is a neurotoxin and can lead to severe systemic reactions and in rare cases, death. The black widow's venom is reportedly 15 times more toxic than the venom of the prairie rattlesnake. However, only a minute quantity is injected with each bite.




              and




              Brown recluse spiders are golden brown in color and can be identified by the characteristic dark brown to black fiddle-shaped pattern on the head region. Brown recluse venom has necrotizing enzymes that generally cause local or systemic reactions.




              Black widows are largish (but not huge) spiders, brown recluses, not so large.






              share|improve this answer



























                3












                3








                3








                Are spiders unable to hurt people?




                There are several species of spiders, some large, others not so large. that are quite capable of harming people. Some can cause severe injury to or kill people. Three requirements:



                • The fangs need to be large enough to puncture the epidermis.

                  The human epidermis is thick enough to render what otherwise would be harmful small creatures impotent with regard to humans.

                • The injected poison needs to be potentially harmful to people.

                  Some spiders inject poisons that are very harmful to insects but have little impact on humans. But other spiders inject poisons that are potentially harmful to all animal life.

                • The amount of poison injected needs to be potentially harmful to people.

                  A spider that injects a tiny amount of what would deadly poison in much larger amounts is not harmful. The dosage makes the poison poisonous.

                Some spiders pass all three requirements. People have died or lost appendages due to spider bites. Australia appears to be the worst place, but very poisonous spiders do exist elsewhere. The Americas, for example, are home to several species of spiders that can be quite harmful to people, and even on occasion can kill. From Spider: This Bites: Venomous Texas Spiders,




                The venom of the black widow is a neurotoxin and can lead to severe systemic reactions and in rare cases, death. The black widow's venom is reportedly 15 times more toxic than the venom of the prairie rattlesnake. However, only a minute quantity is injected with each bite.




                and




                Brown recluse spiders are golden brown in color and can be identified by the characteristic dark brown to black fiddle-shaped pattern on the head region. Brown recluse venom has necrotizing enzymes that generally cause local or systemic reactions.




                Black widows are largish (but not huge) spiders, brown recluses, not so large.






                share|improve this answer
















                Are spiders unable to hurt people?




                There are several species of spiders, some large, others not so large. that are quite capable of harming people. Some can cause severe injury to or kill people. Three requirements:



                • The fangs need to be large enough to puncture the epidermis.

                  The human epidermis is thick enough to render what otherwise would be harmful small creatures impotent with regard to humans.

                • The injected poison needs to be potentially harmful to people.

                  Some spiders inject poisons that are very harmful to insects but have little impact on humans. But other spiders inject poisons that are potentially harmful to all animal life.

                • The amount of poison injected needs to be potentially harmful to people.

                  A spider that injects a tiny amount of what would deadly poison in much larger amounts is not harmful. The dosage makes the poison poisonous.

                Some spiders pass all three requirements. People have died or lost appendages due to spider bites. Australia appears to be the worst place, but very poisonous spiders do exist elsewhere. The Americas, for example, are home to several species of spiders that can be quite harmful to people, and even on occasion can kill. From Spider: This Bites: Venomous Texas Spiders,




                The venom of the black widow is a neurotoxin and can lead to severe systemic reactions and in rare cases, death. The black widow's venom is reportedly 15 times more toxic than the venom of the prairie rattlesnake. However, only a minute quantity is injected with each bite.




                and




                Brown recluse spiders are golden brown in color and can be identified by the characteristic dark brown to black fiddle-shaped pattern on the head region. Brown recluse venom has necrotizing enzymes that generally cause local or systemic reactions.




                Black widows are largish (but not huge) spiders, brown recluses, not so large.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited 2 hours ago

























                answered 2 hours ago









                David HammenDavid Hammen

                6,79142930




                6,79142930













                    Popular posts from this blog

                    Magento 2 duplicate PHPSESSID cookie when using session_start() in custom php scriptMagento 2: User cant logged in into to account page, no error showing!Magento duplicate on subdomainGrabbing storeview from cookie (after using language selector)How do I run php custom script on magento2Magento 2: Include PHP script in headerSession lock after using Cm_RedisSessionscript php to update stockMagento set cookie popupMagento 2 session id cookie - where to find it?How to import Configurable product from csv with custom attributes using php scriptMagento 2 run custom PHP script

                    Can not update quote_id field of “quote_item” table magento 2Magento 2.1 - We can't remove the item. (Shopping Cart doesnt allow us to remove items before becomes empty)Add value for custom quote item attribute using REST apiREST API endpoint v1/carts/cartId/items always returns error messageCorrect way to save entries to databaseHow to remove all associated quote objects of a customer completelyMagento 2 - Save value from custom input field to quote_itemGet quote_item data using quote id and product id filter in Magento 2How to set additional data to quote_item table from controller in Magento 2?What is the purpose of additional_data column in quote_item table in magento2Set Custom Price to Quote item magento2 from controller

                    How to solve knockout JS error in Magento 2 Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?(Magento2) knockout.js:3012 Uncaught ReferenceError: Unable to process bindingUnable to process binding Knockout.js magento 2Cannot read property `scopeLabel` of undefined on Product Detail PageCan't get Customer Data on frontend in Magento 2Magento2 Order Summary - unable to process bindingKO templates are not loading in Magento 2.1 applicationgetting knockout js error magento 2Product grid not load -— Unable to process binding Knockout.js magento 2Product form not loaded in magento2Uncaught ReferenceError: Unable to process binding “if: function()return (isShowLegend()) ” magento 2