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  Click here to go to the first staff post in this thread.   Thread: Aggregation of harvestmen

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  1. 06-20-2005 11:34 AM   Click here to go to the next staff post in this thread.   #1
    GoTerps
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    Aggregation of harvestmen

    I took the following photos this past weekend along Lake Texoma. My finace and I were in the area searching for tarantulas when we decided to hike down to the lake for a swim. After cooling off I started to explore the rock cliffs along the lake and came across a few extremely large aggregations of harvestmen. I've read about such aggregations, but this was the first time I have witnessed one myself. Apparantly, this behavior is a way to conserve moisture.

    Enjoy!!


























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  2. 06-20-2005 11:42 AM #2
    cacoseraph
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    awesome!!!

    i love those guys... omnivorous arachnids... but that's almost too much of a good thing.

    very cool, thanks for sharing
    lists i am currently working on: USA giant centipedes | Non-theraphosidae mygalomorphs | Edible bugs... coming soon!?
    caveat emptor: i am not a doctor nor do i hold any degrees in anything... so i could be wrong
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  3. 06-20-2005 12:31 PM #3
    fusion121
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    Thats an amazing behaviour that I'd never heard of, great photos.
    Regards
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  4. 06-20-2005 11:01 PM   Click here to go to the next staff post in this thread.   #4
    GoTerps
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    Thats an amazing behaviour that I'd never heard of, great photos.
    Thanks!

    It was a pretty amazing site... I couldn't even begin to guess how many there were. Once you got a few feet away it just looked like some type of moss growing off the cliff.
    Nothing in biology makes sense except in light of evolution.
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  5. 06-21-2005 12:03 AM #5
    Brando
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    Hehe when i go to central Texas to my grandparent's ranch they are all up on the house and everywhere else, they leave bad stains on the rocks but they are pretty amazing creatures. When you poke at them they go running and bouncing around its hilarious to watch.
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  6. 06-21-2005 12:58 AM #6
    bistrobob85
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    Wow, i've never heard of anything like this!! Perhaps they think they are bats!! What do you think they are doing, mating, heating up, hidding!?!? Very strange behavior...

    phil.
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  7. 06-21-2005 01:54 AM #7
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    she allready said "Apparantly, this behavior is a way to conserve moisture. " not to be rude
    it is indeed very intresting! I wonder if they mate en-mass during such a huddle. and how long it lasts..perhaps they are waiting for a rain? or sufficiant food quantaties..but more likely then not the cooler parts of the day
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  8. 06-21-2005 08:44 AM #8
    Wikkids_Wench
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    Those really are stunning pics
    If you lend someone £20 and never see them again, it was probably £20 well spent...

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  9. 06-21-2005 10:03 AM   This is the last staff post in this thread.   #9
    GoTerps
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    she allready said "Apparantly, this behavior is a way to conserve moisture. "
    Just wanted to clear up that I'm a "HE"... the "she" in the pictures is my fiance.

    Here's a short passage from a wonderful book entitled Millons of Monarchs, Bunches of Beetles: how bugs find strength in numbers by Gilbert Waldbauer.

    pg. 97
    Harvestmen form "very large and amazingly dense aggregations that are without doubt a means of retaining moisture transpired by its members."

    pg. 98
    "These harvestmen, about 70,000 of them, were tightly packed into the crotch where the three main branches of a 15-foot-tall candelabra cactus joined. The harvestmen at the periphery of the aggregation lay on their backs, with their long, threadlike legs extending straight up above them. The thousands of legs sticking out from the surface of the aggregation obscured the bodies of the harvestmen and made the aggregation look like a thickly-haired pelt. This "pelt" helped slow the loss of moisture from the surface of the mass of harvestmen by diverting the wind."
    Nothing in biology makes sense except in light of evolution.
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  10. 06-21-2005 11:13 AM #10
    G. Carnell
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    you should write an article on this for a magasine, im sure they would love something like that, specially with such good pics!
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  11. 06-21-2005 01:42 PM #11
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    wow sorry for the mistake..nice fiance! lol!. I second you should write something about it as I'm not sure if finding these masses is very commen?
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  12. 06-21-2005 01:43 PM #12
    JohnxII
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    Excellent pictorial documentary! Looks like hairs are growing out of the rocks! Thanks for sharing.
    -Johnson
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  13. 06-21-2005 02:12 PM #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by JohnxII
    Excellent pictorial documentary! Looks like hairs are growing out of the rocks! Thanks for sharing.
    thats what i was going to say ! hairy rocks !!!
    Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, because you
    are crunchy and taste good with ketchup
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  14. 06-21-2005 03:09 PM #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by GoTerps
    Here's a short passage from a wonderful book entitled Millons of Monarchs, Bunches of Beetles: how bugs find strength in numbers by Gilbert Waldbauer.

    pg. 98
    "These harvestmen, about 70,000 of them, were tightly packed into the crotch where the three main branches of a 15-foot-tall candelabra cactus joined.
    *So these harvestmen, about 70,000 of them, were tightly packed into my crotch where AAAAAAAAAAUUUUUUGGGGHHHHHHHHOHHOLYCRAPONAPITA oh wait, it's talking about cactus. . . whew. . . nearly had a frekking heart attack there. . .*

    The above is a transcription of my thoughts as I was reading this passage. Seriously. This is what I thought.

    Anyway, those pics are. . . kind of scary. I mean, I know they have itty bitty mouths, but it seems like if you stuck your hand into that mass, you would pull it back out devoid of flesh, a skeletal hand picked clean. Just a thought. There aren't, like, toxic wastes around this area or anything, are there? I mean, 8 Legged Freaks was fiction, but there's always an element of truth. . .
    -Amanda Palmer's Coin-Operated Boy
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  15. 06-21-2005 03:23 PM #15
    Malhavoc's
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    If they stick all their legs down into the air to divert the wind..whats holding them in place...?
    See My Review Here.
    Back in unpunctuated goodness.
    Forever and Always:
    Draken A Malhavoc.
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