Hadronyche sp. (genus)

A funnel web at Mount Clear, ACT

Hadronyche sp. (genus) at Mount Clear, ACT - 25 Oct 2014
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Identification history

Hadronyche sp. (genus) 9 Sep 2024 NKingsford
Hadronyche sp. (genus) 8 Sep 2024 NateKingsford
Missulena sp. (genus) 21 Jan 2018 KimPullen
Missulena occatoria 16 Jan 2018 KMcCue

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User's notes

This specimen fell into my glove whilst I was weeding Broom. Needless to say it bit me, intense pain like a bull ant. I hope I only stunned it. The nurse at the drop-in Centre at Belconnen amazingly recognised the species from my photo, her constriction bandage worked and the swelling didn't get above the wrist. All fixed in 3 days.

7 comments

AaronClausen wrote:
   17 Jan 2018
Youch!!!!! How come it doesn't have a red coloured head?
KMcCue wrote:
   17 Jan 2018
The female Mouse Spider is dark brown to black and very stout. They are 20-30 mm in body length with a broader head than that of a funnel web. The male Mouse Spider is smaller, about 12 mm long with a blue-black body. It has bright red fangs and fang bases and a red cephalothorax (first half of body). The male can be very aggressive and deliver a painful bite (hope its not worse than the female's bite).
AaronClausen wrote:
   17 Jan 2018
Ah very good to know, thanks heaps...
   21 Jan 2018
I don't think this is the mouse spider, the female doesn't as I understand often leave her burrow, so unless your broom removal was disturbing the soil I'm not sure you would have encountered her. I'm thinking more that it is from the funnnelweb spider family perhaps one of the Hadronyche?
KMcCue wrote:
   21 Jan 2018
Our weeding preference was to pull them out rather than cut and dab which we did only for the large plants. So yes were were disturbing the soil.
KimPullen wrote:
   22 Jan 2018
Missulena sp. Could be M. occatoria, or possibly M. bradleyi or M. insignis.
NateKingsford wrote:
   8 Sep 2024
The eye structure, caput and cephalothorax in general aren't that of Missulena. This one's Hadronyche

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  • 25mm to 50mm Animal size

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