Meet Ecuador's two newest tarantula species, just discovered and already facing imminent threats

One of them was found in late February 2023, 1.5 m above the in the foothill evergreen forest of the Cordillera Occidental. Just discovered, it is already seriously threatened as people use its habitat for mining and agriculture. Its reflects this vulnerability: the tarantula is called Psalmopoeus chronoarachne, from the Greek words for "time" and "spider."

"The compound word refers to the adage that these spiders could 'have their time counted' or reduced by impactful anthropogenic activities. The name addresses conservation concerns about the survival and prevalence of spider species in natural environments," they write in their paper, which was just published in the open-access journal ZooKeys.

The other newly discovered tarantula has an even more curious name: Psalmopoeus satanas. "It is appropriately named because the initial individual that was collected had an attitude!" says researcher Roberto J. León-E, who first spotted it in a bamboo fence in San José de Alluriquín. The spider immediately exhibited defensive behavior; "this behavior then transformed into fleeing, where the spider made quick sporadic movements, nearly too fast to see."

It was the first tarantula he ever caught.

"The members of the Mygalomorphae Research Group in the Laboratory of Terrestrial Zoology at Universidad San Francisco de Quito grew very fond of this individual during its care, in spite of the individual's bad temperament and sporadic attacks (reason for the nickname)," he writes in the paper.

Psalmopoeus satanas. Credit: Peñaherrera-R. P, León-E. RJ

Psalmopoeus chronoarachne. Credit: Peñaherrera-R. P, León-E. RJ

Overview of the ecosystem of both species. Credit: Naia Andrade Hoeneisen

Mining concessions in Ecuador. Credit: José Manuel Falcón-Reibán