Antilles Pinktoe tarantula – Caribena versicolor (~2cm)

£17.50

Try the ‘Sling Starter Kit‘ to keep your gorgeous new sling in 😀 Every new pet should have an awesome new home to live in!

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SKU: Caribena versicolor (Antilles Pinktoe) (~2cm) Categories: , Tags: , , , , ,

Description

Caribena versicolor (Antilles Pinktoe) (1-1.5cm) for Sale
Unsexed Spiderlings (1-1.5cm)

Formerly of the genus Avicularia, Caribena versicolor hails from the trees of Martinique in the Caribbean. From blue colouring as a spiderling, to red as an adult, this species is truly a jewel of the tarantula hobby.

Provide plenty of ventilation along with a temperature range of 21°C to 28°C and a humidity of 70% – 80%.

Try the ‘Sling Starter Kit‘ to keep your gorgeous new sling in 😀 Every new pet should have an awesome new home to live in!

More general information about this species can be found here.

Females can be distinguished from those of Caribena laeta comb. n. by spermathecae with accentuated outwards curvature medially and by lacking intumescence on apex (Fig. 230). Males differ from males of Caribena laeta comb. n. by developed prominence on tegulum (Fig. 246), embolus medial portion and tegulum’s margin form an acute angle in retrolateral view (Fig. 245) and by very curved shape of basal part of embolus in frontal view (Fig. 246).

source: Taxonomic revision and cladistic analysis of Avicularia Lamarck, 1818 (Araneae, Theraphosidae, Aviculariinae) with description of three new aviculariine genera 01

Ref: Wikipedia

The Antilles pinktoe tarantula (Caribena versicolor), also known as the Martinique red tree spider or the Martinique pinktoe is popular as a spider pet because of its docile character and unique coloration.

Previously placed in the genus AviculariaC. versicolor is native to Martinique in the Caribbean Sea.

Antilles pinktoe tarantulas are arboreal (tree-dwelling). They spin elaborate funnel webs in which they spend most of their time.

Spiderlings of C. versicolor are bright blue, with a black tree trunk pattern on the abdomen. As they grow, they gradually lose their blue coloration; the carapace turns green, the abdomen red, and the legs turn green with pink tarsi and a covering of purple hairs. Males usually are slightly more brightly colored than females. As in most tarantula species, males do not grow as large as females, and their abdomens are smaller than those of females, even in proportion to their size.

Taxonomy

Mygale versicolor was first described by Charles Athanase Walckenaer in 1837. In the description, Walckenaer used a female he said was from Guadeloupe and a male from Brazil. However, the two actually belong to different species. This causes nomenclatural problems, since when later workers synonymized Mygale versicolor or transferred it to another genus, they may have ultimately based their decisions on either the female or the male. Caroline Fukushima and Bertani in 2017 treated Mygale versicolor as the female specimen (actually believed to be from Martinique), designating a neotype. On this basis, it is synonymous with Avicularia rutilans. It was transferred to the genus Avicularia by Eugène Simon in 1892 and to the new genus Caribena in 2017.

The Antilles pinktoe tarantula is native to parts of the Lesser Antilles islands. It can be found on the island of Martinique.

 

 

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