View from the Zoo: Meet Talula, a very chilled out tarantula
She currently lives in the education centre and is regularly brought out for the meet a creature sessions. Although arachnophobia (fear of spiders) is a very common phobia, this is a great chance to face your fears and learn more about our eight legged friends. They can be very cute.
However, we all associate tarantulas with having a nasty bite and although Talulah does have fangs, she would prefer to scuttle away instead of biting.
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Hide AdShe would first give out a warning by rearing up and showing of her fangs. The hairs that cover her body are not like the ones on our head, she can flick them off and can be very irritating if inhaled.
In the wild this is what she would do to scare away predators such as racoons, coatis, skunks and birds. They originate from the deserts of Bolivia, Argentina and Chile.
This south American species has become very popular in the pet trade due to their docile nature – Talula is very much a chilled out tarantula.
Chilean rose tarantulas do not have a huge appetite and will only eat one insect a week. In the wild they are known to feed on a variety of different species including grasshoppers, moths, crickets, beetles, cockroaches, mealworms, small lizards, and even some smaller mammals such as rodents. They wait inside burrows and wait for unsuspecting prey to pass before using their two arms to grab them, then use their venom to help digest their food.
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Hide AdAt the zoo talula’s diet consists of crickets, locusts, cockroaches and Mario worms. Weighing up to only a 100 grams she is very light for her size and also very delicate. Being a ground dweller she cannot jump and she fell from a great height it could be fatal.
If you wish to see Talula and our other creepy crawlies, snakes and small mammals come to our meet a creature sessions which run every single day in the education centre at 3pm.