The Citizen (Gauteng)

Scientists find a tailed spider

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Washington – If you are not a fan of spiders, you may not like the creepy little arachnid scientists found entombed in chunks of amber from northern Myanmar. Unlike its spider cousins alive today, this guy had a tail.

Scientists on Monday described four specimens of the arachnid, called Chimerarac­hne yingi, that inhabited a Cretaceous Period tropical forest about 100 million years ago during the dinosaur age.

Alongside modern spider traits such as a silk-producing structure called a spinneret, it possessed a remarkably primitive feature – a whip-like tail covered in short hairs that it may have used for sensing predators and prey.

“It is a key fossil for understand­ing spider origins,” said palaeontol­ogist Bo Wang of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

“Our new fossil most likely represents the earliest branch of spiders, and implies that there was a lineage of tailed spiders that presumably originated in the Paleozoic (the geological era that ended 251 million years ago), and survived at least into the Cretaceous of Southeast Asia,” he added.

Despite its fearsome appearance, the fanged Chimerarac­hne was only about 7.5 mm long – more than half of which was its tail.

University of Kansas palaeontol­ogist Paul Selden said the arachnid represents “a kind of missing link” between true spiders and earlier spider forerunner­s that had tails but lacked spinnerets.

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