A Tarantula hawk
to suck peoples blood and kill you
Yes, a tarantula Hawk could certainly kill a black widow spider if it wanted to. A black widow spider would be too small for a tarantula hawk to bother with most of the time. Actually, black widows are a favorite meal for some types of mud wasps. The wasp will sting the spider - paralyzing it - not killing it. Then take the black widow and stuff it inside the nest it's making for it's off spring. When the wasp larvae are growing, they'll feed on the paralyzed spider. This is the same basic thing that a tarantual hawk does with the much larger tarantula spider. While you can find video's of black widows appearing to catch and kill wasps, this is definitely the exception rather than the rule. A wasp can run into trouble if it finds itself tangled in the spider's web, though most of the time they're able to navigate their way around it and deliver the paralizing sting before carrying the spider off to it's nest.
In about 1-10 seconds...
The camel spider injects venom into their prey that leaves them numb and unable to move. They then inject them with enzymes which digest their inner tissues, reducing it to liquid that the spider can then drink.
a tarantula I think they can KILL YOU :o
Not proven. Although I thoroughly dont think so.
Some can but only pousisnous spiders can e.g Tarantula,red back ,black widow.
Tarantulas have very few natural enemies other than humans. Its only real natural enemy is an insect known as the spider wasp. One of the types of the spider wasp is the The Tarantula Hawk or Tarantula Killer (Pepsis wasps) giant wasp. The wasp finds the tarantula by using olfactory or the sense of smell. The wasp stings the tarantula, which paralyzes it, then the wasp lays an egg on its abdomen and then buries it in the tarantulas burrow. When the egg hatches the tarantula is used as a living food source by the wasp grub.
well it varies on how big the dog is, how vicious the dog is and if the dog or spider are hungry
black widow, brown recluse, and many others, but those 2 are the most common in the u.s.
No. The largest spider in the world is the Goliath Birdeater. The Camel Spider naturally does not go over 7.5 inches in leg-span, while the Goliath can grow over 12". Making it far bigger in comparison. Second to the Goliath is the Brazilian Salmon Pink Tarantula, and third is the Chaco Golden Knee.