no
Yes. If a school of them can chew a whole cow to its skeleton in two minutes, a floating helpless tarantula won't stand a chance.
A tarantula hawk is a spider wasp which hunts tarantulas as food for its larvae which its body lengths measures up to two inches. Only a few animals, such as roadrunners, eat tarantula hawks. The wasps are "nectivorous," and they have been known to become "flight-challenged" after consuming fermented fruit.
Female tarantulas reach breeding age at around two years old.
Presumably, it is using its other six legs to stand.
Some of them do. I think there is a specific species of frog and tarantula that have a symbiotic relationship. A symbiotic relationship is a pair of two different species living together in which they both benefit from the relationship. The frog gets protection, and the tarantula gets the food the frog lures in.
They have two body sections the head-chest region and the cephalothorax/abdamen. And im only 12...but i don't know about the insides.
is it a tarantula? if so, it's a Mexican redknee tarantula. http://www.Google.com/search?hl=en&q=Mexican+red+knee+tarantula&btnG=Google+Search
They are very fuzzy. They feel like bony fuzzy thing. I've had two and even though some people think they are creepy they are really adorable calm creatures. They are like little babies when you hold them.
Tarantulas protect themselves in several ways. First, they throw the urticating hairs on their bodies. These contain a bit of the poison they have, but it just causes an irritation to the animal or person. Second they use the fangs they have. You can always tell when a tarantula will strike because it raises up on its hind legs so it can open the two front legs to strike. If you are around one, watch it as it goes after food. Third, it will hide. Tarantulas like a good place to hide. The trap door tarantula has a nifty little trap door on his doorway.
One to two years, but some tarantula can live twenty or more years.
Assuming you're talking about the two finger-like objects on the spider's abdomen - they're the spinnerets . The spinnerets are where the spider produces the silk from for web-spinning.