Retirement and forum shutdown (17 Jan 2022)
Hi,
John Howell who has managed the forum for years is getting on and wishes to retire from the role of managing it.
Over the years, he has managed the forum through good days and bad days and he has always been fair.
He has managed to bring his passion for fish keeping to the forum and keep it going for so long.
I wish to thank John for his hard work in keeping the forum going.
With John wishing to "retire" from the role of managing the forum and the forum receiving very little traffic, I think we must agree that forum has come to a natural conclusion and it's time to put it to rest.
I am proposing that the forum be made read-only from March 2022 onwards and that no new users or content be created. The website is still registered for several more years, so the content will still be accessible but no new topics or replies will be allowed.
If there is interest from the ITFS or other fish keeping clubs, we may redirect traffic to them or to a Facebook group but will not actively manage it.
I'd like to thank everyone over the years who helped with forum, posted a reply, started a new topic, ask a question and helped a newbie in fish keeping. And thank you to the sponsors who helped us along the away. Hopefully it made the hobby stronger.
I'd especially like to thank John Howell and Valerie Rousseau for all of their contributions, without them the forum would have never been has successful.
Thank you
Darragh Sherwin
insects
- dar (darren curry)
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Jay
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- dar (darren curry)
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Giant house spider Vs neon tetra?
lets say for instance, yes, would the spiders fangs penetrate a fishes scales or mouth resulting in death or serious injury
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- Acara (Dave Walters)
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always on the lookout for interesting corys.pm me if you know off any!
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Jay
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- igmillichip (ian millichip)
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- Viperbot (Jason Hughes)
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Native spiders are venomous.....but I doubt that there is much in the way of LD50 toxicological data for wolf spider venom on the various tropical fish.
Indeed...




Jay
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- Jim (Jim Lawlor)
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Hypothetical - would have thought lotto style odds of it happening
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- Ma (mm mm)
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Mark
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- joey (joe watson)
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and either the archer fish, severum or rainbow have all eaten them with no ill effect. very quickly too, they like em better than crickets or shrimp.
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- igmillichip (ian millichip)
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Some of the larger native spiders are capable of biting large prey, including humans. There's also at least one (dysdera crocata or something like that) built to penetrate the armour of woodlice, which would be well capable of penetrating fish scales. All spiders are venomous and can cause damage equivalent to a wasp sting.
Hypothetical - would have thought lotto style odds of it happening
I've been stung by a wasp, and it hurt......but believe me, I would not like to get nabbed by anyone of many of my spiders......the damage would be a lot more (and more painful) than a simple wasp sting.
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- Jim (Jim Lawlor)
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I guess you know more about different insect/arachnid toxins than I do, but I only know two people bitten by spiders in Ireland and they compared them to wasp stings. Perhaps it was due to the volume injected?
One did say that his arm swelled up quite a bit for about 24 hours
is there much danger of being nabbed by Irish spiders?
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- dar (darren curry)
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- Pat (Pat Coogan)
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I was sitting in an office a couple of months ago and something caught my eye running accross the floor. I thought it was a mouse. When the screams started I went over to investigate and had to get a big cup to trap the spider.
Instead of squashing it I put it outside. God knows what species it was.
Point is do we really know whats living here any more with all the shipping from foreign climes.
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If you're going to be crazy, you have to get paid for it or else you're going to be locked up.
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- dar (darren curry)
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- igmillichip (ian millichip)
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As for exotic spiders becoming naturalised? That is a bigger discussion, and one which would greatly concern me.
For any venomous animal, there are a number of things that need taking into account.
Firstly, we consider that every substance is poisonous…..it is the dose that counts (a basic tenant of toxicology).
All venomous animals are hazards; the risk of envenomation is a factor that determines how dangerous a situation is.
We need to consider….
The actual toxicology of the venom. The LD50 is a value used to indicate the dose that will kill 50% of all test subjects (and that is cited for a specific species of test subject)…..the lower the LD50, the more potent the poison is to the test subject.
Within that, different substances act on different animals in different ways; and different animals have different ways of dealing with a substance. If something can be detoxified and excreted rapidly then that may lower the potency.
All of that indicates the level of the hazard.
But for anything to do any harm it needs to get into the body of a victim.
So that leads us to the questions of Risk.
If the venomous species has no way of delivering venom to a victim, then the risk of envenomation is reduced (but that does not alter the level of hazard). Eg if the venomous animal is on the moon then it is no risk to me (but it is still a hazard), if the venomous animal has fangs unable to penetrate my skin then the risk of envenomation is reduced etc etc
The behaviour of a venomous species also comes into play……is the spider more likely to run away than stand and fight? Is it an aggressive spider? Does a potential victim frequently come into contact with the venomous species?
Venom is an energy expensive thing; a spider needs to conserve it as much as possible.
As such, many spiders will only use their venom if absolutely necessary…..in such cases a ‘bite’ may be a dry bite warning (if the fangs penetrate, then it could hurt).
Spiders are very good at determining, to quite a level of precision, the amount of venom to inject. (a bit different to the case with bees).
A large volume of venom of low LD50 is not a promising sign for a victim injected with such venom; a very small volume of venom with a very high LD50 is much more promising.
That is where Danger comes in….we have a Hazard, then individual situations indicate a level of Risk…..if the Risk is high and the intrinsic potential for doing harm is high (eg potentially fatal substance) then the Danger is high.
If the hazard is potentially fatal yet there is zero chance of contact then Danger is zero (eg me on earth with the spider on the moon).
For our native spiders, there is little danger to us….but that does not mean that they do not pose a danger to small animals.
Now, some spiders have venom mixes that contain a substance that stimulates the pain receptors (a bit like having an intravenous injection of the hottest vindahloo curry)……now they hurt yet may have no medical significance other than pain.
And others are extremely hazardous and extremely dangerous (if in contact with them)….but that tends to be reserved for exotic species.
ian
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- dar (darren curry)
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- igmillichip (ian millichip)
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ah come on now Ian, spiders on the moon? lol no i get it, so i have the chalk board out and i'm deciphering all the possibilities and i got E=MC2? after a bit of back tracking and altering i came up with the spider would fall into the tank the fish would strike and the spider might give him a bite as a warning but could deliver venom so depending on the size of the fish, type of spider and speed of the strike he might be lunch, so the mythbusters answer is, it's plausible
I decided not to include any quantum mechanics calculations outlining possible spatial distribution of electrons in venom (especially the high-spin vs low-spin quantum state and relative volume of Iron) and then limiting that to the most probable distribution.....but the offshot to the question is Yes, it is plausible (given the variables described in your post Dar).
and.....I like the 'toxin-on-the-moon' analogy for 'low risk' situations.

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- Jim (Jim Lawlor)
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I've been stung by a wasp, and it hurt......but believe me, I would not like to get nabbed by anyone of many of my spiders......the damage would be a lot more (and more painful) than a simple wasp sting.
@ Ian, I've googled this a bit now - a lot of work done in the US where one of our spiders is known as the hobo spider and blamed for a lot of biting. However, most sites claim very little harm, with a lot of comparisons to wasp stings. Are your spiders exotic rather than native species?
Also - many scientists have had trouble trying to provoke the spiders to bite, so it seems pretty rare for them to bite anything larger than their normal prey. Maybe the original scenario is "possible" rather than "probable" - don't know where "plausible" fits in . . .
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- igmillichip (ian millichip)
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As for native spiders.....they are big problem for me as well. I have a number of small animals (frogs, eg PDFs, pygmy chameleons, minute geckos) that might try to eat a spider. So I need to make sure all vivs are clear of spiders. Not sure if these animals would actually attempt to eat a spider....but I take no chances.
Possible vs probable vs plausible.....hum, well I guess that everything is possible, but the world works by weighted probabilities IMO. It is possible that when we step outside the front door that our first step will be onto the moon, but the probability of that happening is almost zero (so it doesn't happen); I see that Dar quote Dar quoted E=MC2, so that leads me to think of the notion of every step being an unavoidable consequence of the preceeding one (maybe weighted probabilities????).
On the subject of probabilities......often the method of scientific investigation gives incorrect answers simply because we are observing an event. An aggressive spider may not attack a large human proding at it....as maybe the spider things that there is no benefit in wasting energy.
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- joey (joe watson)
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if a native spider bit you and you had a reaction its similar to some people having serious allergies to wasp stings
i was bitten when i was younger by a big ass spider in england, no reaction just a pinch as he bit and i only feel a little sting from a wasp bite and it looks like a small red pimple for a day
those who HAVE had a reaction from a spider bite, how do they react to wasp stings? in other words, compared to a wasp sting that is only lethal for insects and just gives us an irritation, if a spider doesn't even give the average person an irritation and only puts a fly into a state of unconsciousness i very doubt the potential it has to kill a fish, especially as freshwater fish live in rivers and lakes, around these are ecosystems of which spiders would be a part of, some more dangerous than our own natives, and these spiders may fall onto the water and be eaten by said fish. if a fish wont eat it then it wouldn't feed on it in the wild, my archers specifically hunt (often poisonous) insects including very dangerous spiders in south america and the are usually first to the spiders i throw in my tank
the rainbow fish eats insects from the surface in rivers/lakes in australia home to the most dangerous creatures and my rainbow has no problem snapping spiders from the surface
severums from south america will also have insects falling on the rivers and will, when possible, eat said insects. and so too does my severum
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- Ma (mm mm)
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Hold on wait



You certainly don't have to convince a Rainbow to eat a spider:)
I think what is implied in previous posts is that even with those fish in the wild, some may die from this feeding although death from eating spiders may be very rare indeed, thus it matters not, lots of those fish in their native waters, but in your tank if you get unlucky, your one or one of a few fish might die and it is a risk some are not prepared to take.
Takes Bertie Bassets matey:)
Mark
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- dar (darren curry)
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- igmillichip (ian millichip)
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…..we also know that poison dart frogs eat highly toxic insects....the PDFs manage to avoid the toxic effects, yet most other animals would not be able to avoid being poisoned.
Each venom has differing effects on differing animals and on individuals.
As a Hazard, venom’s hazard level is not necessarily inherently dependant upon a single individual’s reaction; but an allergy does recon within the Risk and Danger aspect (that is why proper risk assessments are important).
The standard measure of toxicity is the LD50….but that only tells us the amount needed to kill 50% of the test population, thus, inherently, indicating that we need to recognise that a single given dose may or may not kill a given specimen.
If a substance has a low LD50, then, in my opinion, it would be rather ignorant to listen to anecdotal stories of someone getting zapped and surviving and using that as an example to say the substance is not as dangerous as it is made out to be.
Allergies or other types of applicable hypersensitivity are a set of factors that complicate the potential danger of an envenomation.
I recon that my saratoga's regular jumps after dark are for catching spiders and other forms of inverts from above the water, but that doesn't mean to say that all fish would be safe to eat a spider.
A sub-lethal dose of venom doesn’t mean that no harm is done.
Do we really have enough info about long-term sub-lethal doses? The answer is no, and LD50 data have little role in such scenarios, but it is a focus of more and more attention.
ian
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- Jim (Jim Lawlor)
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Joey has almost no reaction to wasp stings. I was stung twice in the chest a couple of weeks ago. It swelled up and hurt for about 8 hours, but nothing more. Some people die.
As Mark said, do you want to risk that your 1,000 euro arrowana is the one that will die? Has a tropical fish evolved any tolerance on the venom of temperate invertebrates (or are they the same.) Would you feed wasps to your fish?
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- Ma (mm mm)
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So if I am not sure that spider venom of a certain available spider for food is safe or not for my fish to consume I prefer not to feed it. I even checked before feeding crane flies even though I assumed them to be safe.
Have found many spiders as you do, but one big black horrible on in the hallway, man it was ugly and quite big, put it outside, never even thought of feeding it to the fish.
Mark
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- igmillichip (ian millichip)
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There are some interesting variations and some equally interesting questions about selective toxicity.
Even if we take one of the most toxic substances known…..tetradotoxin from poison dart frogs and some fish (eg puffer fish).
Tetradotoxin is a pretty ubiquitous poison, yet how do poison dart frogs and puffer fish not succumb to its action?
In fish it appears as though the tetradotoxin is produced by bacteria in specialised cells, but the jury is out with respect to poison dart frogs….in that there is a case that the frogs may obtain it or a pre-cursor of tetradotoxin from dietary sources.
So, could a poison dart frog or other amphibian (and it would have to be another much larger amphibian) having tetradotoxin swallow a tetradotoxin laden puffer fish and survive?
And what about vice-versa?
In toxicology, it is not just what the poison does to the body that counts…what the body does with the poison also counts.
Think about heavy drinkers versus normally non-drinkers on a heavy booze night. The acute toxic effects of alcohol are probably going to be more noticeable in the normally non-drinker, but the chronic effects of alcohol in the heavy drinker will be added to.
There are differences between acute, chronic and cumulative poisoning…..different outcomes and illness.
In insects, the insecticide malathion is, as a molecule, not particularly toxic….because the insect can ‘detoxify’ it…..Aaaagh, but wait….that’s the problem and that is why malathion is used as an insecticide:
the insect’s attempt to detoxify malathion produces another compound (malaoxon) that is deadly to the insect and one which the insect cannot detoxify rapidly (or at all)
In humans, we have a different detoxification system wrt malathion….hence the acute problems of malathion are low risk (although there is concern about chronic exposure).
Much of the work in toxicology is very ‘now’ and knowledge is increasing at an alarming rate. When I first started working on frog toxins (for example), I could probably name and draw all compounds known at that time…..but nowadays, I need my database to help me keep up with just the count of the number of toxins.
I love toxiciology…..
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