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Canterbury Museum September 2008 to
onwards
At the end
of this month four new tarantulas will take up residence in Discovery at
Canterbury Museum. The eight-legged arrivals, including an endangered
Mexican red knee tarantula, will be housed in a purpose built terrarium.
Each spider has been named by a local school as part of a competition.
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The rare Mexican
red knee ‘Rod nee’ (named by Kindercare Clyde Rd Early Learning
Centre) will be joined by Costa Rican stripe ‘Coco’ (named by
Room 5c, Selwyn House School), Peruvian pink toe ‘Nigella’
(named by Room 8, Aorangi School), and Goliath bird eater ‘King
Kong’ (named by Room 7, Waimairi School). The winning classes
will receive free entry to Discovery to visit the tarantulas and
have all their spider related questions answered by Dr Simon
Pollard, Curator of Invertebrate Zoology. Each class will also
receive a book about spiders to take back to their school. |
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Large, hairy and photogenic, tarantulas have earned a fearsome
reputation through Hollywood exaggeration and popular culture.
However, according to Dr Simon Pollard, they are actually quiet,
calm and intriguing creatures. “Tarantulas, and spiders in
general, have a totally unfounded reputation for being dangerous
and harmful to humans. Yes, they can bite but this happens
rarely and more often than not it won’t do much damage.
Tarantulas are fascinating animals to observe and are really
quite beautiful.”
The
new tarantulas can be seen in Discovery at Canterbury Museum
from Monday 29 September. Entry to Discovery is $2, or free for
Discovery Club members. General admission to the Museum is free;
donations are appreciated. Dr Simon Pollard will also give a
free public lecture on the evening of 11 November on the subject
of spiders in popular culture. Visit
www.canterburymuseum.com for more information. |
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