Not usually. Once the eggs hatch, the spiderlings are completely independent - quickly dispersing in search of their first meal. However - while the eggs are developing, some tarantulas 'stand guard' over the egg-sac to keep it safe from predators.
A tarantula has eight legs.
First, an adult Tarantula Hawk will go hunting for a Tarantula in it's burrow. Once it finds the burrow, it will drag the Tarantula out of it's burrow and inject a paralyzing venom into it. When the Tarantula is paralyzed, it will be taken into burrow made by the wasp and a single egg will be laid on the Tarantula. The wasp will leave. When the egg hatches, the larvae will feed on the living Tarantula. The larvae will eventually enter the inside of the Tarantula, consuming it from the inside out. While it does this, it has to avoid any major organs in the Tarantula so that it's food doesn't die. The Tarantula Hawk will become an adult (after the pupa stage) and leave. That is the cycle for the Tarantula Hawk.
Female tarantulas reach breeding age at around two years old.
They each plant their young on another organism and let their young use the organism as a host for them to feed
a lot
One.
Many animals do not eat the tarantula because it has harmful hairs surrounding its body that can sting the predator, so most animals avoid it!
The word tarantula has four syllables. The syllables of the word are ta-ran-tu-la.
some say 2,400 buts its actually 15-18 it depends on what kind it is hope it helps
It depends on the species. Most tarantula species commonly reach sexual maturity anywhere between 2 and 5 years of age, although a few can take up to a decade.
no
many things like the YELLOW SPOTTED LIZARD eats about 5 tarantulas a day