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[[Category:Latrodectus]]
[[Category:Latrodectus]]
[[Category:Dangerous spiders]]
[[Category:Dangerous spiders]]
[[Category:Fauna of New Zealand]]
[[Category:Insects of New Zealand]]


[[fr:Latrodectus katipo]]
[[fr:Latrodectus katipo]]

Revision as of 12:13, 13 October 2006

Katipo spider
Scientific classification
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L. katipo
Binomial name
Latrodectus katipo
Powell, 1871

The katipo or red katipo (Latrodectus katipo) is an endangered, venomous spider native to New Zealand. It is a widow spider like its relatives, the black katipo, the Australian red-back spider, and the USA's black widow spiders. The Katipo has also been sighted in parts of California. Katipo is a Māori name and means "night-stinger".

Urquhart (1887) believed the much smaller male of the Katipo to be a separate species and named it Theridion melanozantha.

The Katipo's natural habitat is typically under logs or other wood, especially near beaches. This narrow habitat along with their rareness, general non-aggressiveness (they bite as a last resort) and human awareness of where they live, means the incidence of Katipo bites is very low. If bitten, redback antivenom is an effective treatment and is available from major New Zealand hospitals. Only two fatalities from Katipo bite have been recorded in modern times.[1]

It is because of the Katipo's unique status as a native poisonous spider able to cause death that it is well known by the public although few people have ever seen one.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Hornabrook R (1951). "Studies in preventive hygiene from the Otago Medical School: the katipo spider". N Z Med J. 50 (276): 131–8. PMID 14853159.