• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Brand New Species Of Scorpion Is A Venom Spraying Badass From Columbia

January 24, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Species that possess venom are some of the most badass in the animal world. Now, a new member has joined their ranks – a scorpion from Columbia that represents the first venom-spraying species of scorpion reported both in South America and in the genus it belongs to. 

ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE

The new species has been called Tityus achilles after the Greek mythological figure of Achilles and his competent use of a spear. It is the 230th member of the genus Tityus and is found in the broadleaf rainforest of Magdalena Valley in Cundinamarca, Columbia, where it seems to spend its time on the forest floor, rather than in the trees as other species that occur in the same area are known to do. 

To learn more about how this species uses its venom, researcher Léo Laborieux recorded 46 venom pulses using a high frame rate camera. In doing so, the study author identified two types of airborne defense when it comes to spraying, each with a different level of reach and a different level of venom.

The two types of venom spraying were defined as: venom flicks, which consist of a single droplet projected a short distance, and venom sprays, which are more sustained. Out of all the venom spraying in the experiment, 14 flicks and 24 sprays were used by the scorpions.

The results also show that like other scorpions, the venom secretions used in the experiment change in composition after subsequent pulses. Initially, a clear pre-venom is used, and then after five or so pulses, the secretion becomes white and opaque. The maximum distance the spraying venom reached was approximately 36 centimeters (14 inches). 

Creating and creating venom takes a lot of energy from the animal and is typically used solely in predation events or in self-defense. There are only a few animals capable of spraying their venom and only two genera of scorpions.

“Scorpions have to raise their metabolism enormously to produce venom. For them, it’s like running a marathon,” evolutionary biologist Dr Arie van der Meijden of the CIBIO-InBIO Institute in Portugal, who was not involved in this study, told IFLScience. “It takes a lot of effort to make it, but then they never use quite so much.”

ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE

The experiment featured only juvenile scorpions, so questions remain about whether there are differences in these two venom tactics between sub-adults and adults. Laborieux also hypothesizes that comparing venom spraying between different genera of venom-spraying scorpions could advance our understanding of its evolution and specialization within these creatures.

The study is published in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. China’s elite snowboarders herald new wave of Olympians
  2. Philippines to investigate 154 police over deadly drugs war
  3. Puffins’ Fighting Side Gets Airtime In David Attenborough’s First UK Nature Series
  4. The Unlikely Coexistence Of Spaceships And Wild Nature Around The World

Source Link: Brand New Species Of Scorpion Is A Venom Spraying Badass From Columbia

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Finally, A Successful Starship Launch – What This Means For The Moon Landings
  • 26 Years After Launch, The ISS Will Try A New Way To Stay In Orbit Next Month
  • The World Map As You Know It Is Misleading – Now Africa Wants To Change That
  • “It’s Totally Wacky”: Oldest Known Ankylosaur Had A Kind Of Armor Never Seen In Any Vertebrate – Living Or Extinct
  • “Lost City Of The Amazon” Wasn’t Destroyed By A Volcano After All
  • Why Do Hammerhead Sharks Have A Hammerhead?
  • Neanderthals In Iberia Had Funerary Practices – They’re Just Not What We Expected
  • Monochrome Rainbows: In The Right Circumstances, Rainbows Can Look Very Strange Indeed
  • Shark Teeth Are Losing Their Bite As Ocean Acidification Takes Hold
  • Wasp “Riding A Broomstick” Among Fantastic Finalists Of Wildlife Photographer Of The Year
  • Long-Lost Sailback Houndshark Not Seen Since 1973 Rediscovered In Papua New Guinea
  • How Do You Age A Gas Giant? Jupiter’s Age Revealed By “Molten Rock Raindrops”
  • JWST Observes Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS: “One Of The Most Unusual Comets Ever Seen”
  • A Woman Injected Crushed Black Widow To Get High, And It Was A Very Bad Trip
  • Man With 31-Year History Of Depression Feels “Overwhelming Joy” After Experimental Brain Stimulation
  • The Pythagorean Theorem Predates Pythagoras By 1,000 Years: “The Proof Is Carved Into Clay”
  • Asteroid Bennu Is A “Frankenstein’s Monster” Of Material From The Inner Solar System, Outer, And Beyond
  • Canada Is Home To The World’s First Official UFO Landing Pad
  • Path Of Hurricane Erin, One Of The Fastest-Strengthening Storms On Record, Captured In Dramatic Satellite Images
  • What Did Ancient People Think When They Found Fossils?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version