Bill Shutt's Unpopular, Cannibalistic Opinion
I had gotten a completely different book than what I thought I'd get when trying to get a tarantula-related book from Carnegie Library. It's called, "Cannibalism: A Perfectly Natural History" by Bill Schutt. It's about the statistics and information of zoology of many different animals such as invertebrates and mammals, including insects of course. I have chosen this book, not to look sketchy but because tarantulas are cannibals, it's how they survive as newborns and what they commit after mating/during courtship. I had chosen to look deep into a section of their natural instincts such as cannibalism because that's what spiders are known for. I learned that animals use cannibalism as a survival/hunting strategy. And that there are specific species that use females and their kids as survival by eating them as a tactic of survival along with mating evolution. This is very helpful to comparing other animals so I could get a better view and aspect to the zoology of arachnids. This book gets even more interesting every time I research it more and I'm thinking about posting on how he might be wrong on how it is perfectly natural because there is evidence on how he can be right and wrong.
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