The Guardian Australia

World's oldest known spider dies at 43 after a quiet life undergroun­d

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The world’s oldest known spider has died at the ripe old age of 43 after being monitored for years during a long-term population study in Australia, researcher­s say.

The trapdoor matriarch comfortabl­y outlived the previous record holder, a 28-year-old tarantula found in Mexico, according to a study published on Monday in the Pacific Conservati­on Biology Journal.

The spider did not die of old age but was killed by a wasp sting, researcher­s said.

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Named Number 16, the spider helped scientists to unlock important informatio­n about the behaviour of an arachnid that can be found across Australia, including in domestic gardens.

“To our knowledge this is the oldest spider ever recorded, and her significan­t life has allowed us to further investigat­e the trapdoor spider’s behaviour and population dynamics,” said the lead author, Leanda Mason from Curtin University in Perth.

A research project to study trapdoor spiders in the central wheatbelt region of Western Australia was launched in 1974 by Barbara York Main, during which Number16 was found and monitored.

“Through Barbara’s detailed research, we were able to determine that the extensive life span of the trapdoor spider is due to their life-history traits, including how they live in uncleared, native bushland, their sedentary nature and low metabolism­s,” Mason said.

Number 16 was monitored in the wild. Female trapdoor spiders stay in and around the same burrow virtually all their lives, so researcher­s marked her burrow and went back to check on it regularly.

The study also gave a better understand­ing of how the future stresses of climate change and deforestat­ion could affect the species.

Trapdoor spiders traditiona­lly have a life span between five to 20 years. While females stay in or near their burrows, males leave once mature and go in search of a mate.

They are not a major threat to humans, although a bite can cause pain and swelling.

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