Apsley Gorge


Click on the photos to see an enlarged version


Photos taken on 2nd February 2003 of the walk from Karori to Tabletop Hut

Apsley Gorge
DCP_2259 10:18

Funnel Web spider nest. Note the supporting lines in this photo radiating from the tubular (the nests are usually this shape despite their common name) entrance to the burrow.

Rowleys Creek Grid Reference 938.54 859.02






Text below from the excellent Queensland Museum site: http://www.qmuseum.qld.gov.au/features/spiders/spiders/FunnelWebSpider.asp

Funnel web Spider

Hadronyche species

Atrax robustus

Identification

Full size - hand; leg diameter - letter 'O'. Jet black shiny head; black legs and black to grey (when gravid ) abdomen; abdomen as large as last joint of adult thumb. Slow moving; does not jump, but lunges when aggravated.

Habitat

Cool, dark moist places - litter, staghorns, ferns, logs. Rarely found in outer Brisbane suburbs bordering native forest, e.g. Rochedale, Springbrook, Kenmore, Brookfield, The Gap, Mt Coot-tha.

North of Coffs Harbour tends to occur in cool mountainous areas, rainforest, and in cleared pastoral areas (e.g. Maleny, Guyra). Mountain rainforest around Mossman (north Queensland) and from rainforest or moist forests along east coastal fringe; west of Gladstone south to Tas. and SA. Males active in light rain in warm months, October - May in Qld.

Web

Rover, also sits. Burrows not obviously funnel -shaped; under rocks and in banks the strong lines radiate from broad floppy silk entrance; in trees, web appears like an X or T with 3 or 4 entrances.

Bite

Long strong fangs strike vertically like snakes. Bite and stay. Male venom more toxic, severe effects, sometimes death (without antivenom); no deaths recorded from bite of females. Muscular trembling a symptom of bite.



From: http://www.rochedalss.qld.edu.au/spider/spider3.htm

The Sydney Funnel-web constructs its own burrow which may be over a foot deep or uses a suitable crevice in rocks or round house foundations. Sometimes, Funnel-webs may be found in colonies of over a hundred. The webs are white and often tubular rather than funnel-like with supporting lines running out to surrounding rocks and debris.

The spiders may take several years to reach maturity and live for perhaps 8 years or longer. When mature, the males leave their webs and lead a homeless existence. They tend to roam and often enter homes particularly during Summer after a heavy downpour of rain.They mate with a female for only one season and if not killed shortly after mating, die within a few months.

This spider is one of Australia's largest and most easily identified. The body of a female Sydney Funnel-web spider measures about 35mm in length and the male about 25mm. The paired spinnerets at the end of the abdomen are particularly long, much longer than those of other large dark spiders.The male is of a more delicate build than the female and has 2 features which help identification. One is a little spur half way along its second leg on each side and the other is finely pointed feelers to transfer sperm to the female.

Both sexes are very aggressive and when approached, will rear up into a ready-to-strike position. Their massive fangs can penetrate a child's fingernail. However, most people bitten by them are not injected with sufficient venom to cause any illness.Often it falls off the tips of the spider's fangs as it makes a preliminary downward thrust. People bitten by the female may at the most suffer pain around the bitten area.

The venom of the male is 5 times more toxic than the female. Man and monkeys seem to be especially susceptible to the venom. For example, rabbits can be given very large doses of the venom with no apparent effect but a small dose injected into a monkey produces the terrifying symptoms seen in humans. In all cases where the victim has died, and in which the spider has been positively identified, it has been a male spider.

The venom contains a low molecular weight toxin called atraxtoxin which attacks the nerves of the body causing thousands of electrical impulses to be fired down them. The muscles twitch and there is a profuse flow of perspiration, tears and saliva. The venom also causes changes to blood vessels which can lead to shock and coma due to brain damage. All the evidence suggests that the effects wear off after a few hours. Provided the victim reaches hospital before serious illness has developed, he or she has an excellent chance of recovery. An antivenom to the venom of the Sydney Funnel-web Spider became available in 1980.

Northern or tree dwelling funnel web spider

(Atrax formidabilis)

The Northern or Tree-dwelling Funnel-web Spider is the most dangerous member of this species and near to the most dangerous in the world.They are found from northern New South Wales to southern Queensland, usually in heavily timbered areas which are rarely entered by man. A female may make her nest in a hole as high as 18 metres from the base of a tree. The venom from both males and females has shown to be more toxic than the male Sydney Funnel-web. The antivenom developed for the Sydney Funnel-web may be used effectively against the Northern Funnel-web.



On to next page


Back to previous page


Back to the clickable map


Back to the home page







Webmaster: Don Hitchcock

Email: don@northnet.com.au


Anyone (e.g. students, libraries, government agencies such as tourist bureaus, the general public) may use, print and publish these photographs taken by me and presented on this website for any legitimate non-commercial purpose, at no cost, and without asking permission. However a note such as "Photo: Don Hitchcock" in a small typeface somewhere in the document would be appreciated if it is to be published.