Yeah let's do this: here's the Super Spider

The last sentence shows that super spider has been proven to be lethal bc people have already tried it, so somone has done this.

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I think they ment that it had to be done to prove it, not that it hasn’t been proven. They were saying ‘has’ but I believe meant ‘had’ and that is what caused confusion.

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Oh I see, well in that case I apologize for the unnecessary over-explanation!

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I read things weird so I was really confused why nobody was reading it like me. I read it probably 5 times before I realized what was going on lol.

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I did it in 2018. It lived about 15 minutes after it hatched which is a common theme among the ones I’ve heard of. The same thing happens with Super Jag carpets. The one I produced was leucistic but did have some pattern spots.

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hi,

last year we unknowingly mated 2 spiders.
Bumble Bee 50% het Clown - female
Banana Spider poss Piebald - male.
Both adults do not show wobbling, except for a slight fluttering of the head before catching food in the male.
We still have a male from this union, he is vital, thriving, without wobbling. born 13.5.2024, today he weighs 550g
I add photo of both parent and son :wink:



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@zuzi That’s a pastel banana spider. Not a super spider.

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Curious how that happens since both are clearly visually spider

Also as @armiyana said, that’s not a super spider hatchling, it’s just a pastel banana spider with one copy of the spider morph, so nothing unexpected here. Given the pairing, 50% of the offspring should statistically be spiders

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What I am actually curious about myself (along with why would you breed them?)
Is how many eggs were laid?
How many eggs went bad?
How many hatched?
Did any of those hatchlings die?
Because on top of 50% being spiders… Statistics also say 25% would be supers as well. Any eggs that died before hatching would most likely have been super spider I think

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