Myth: Tarantulas Care For Their Young

A female Wolf spider taking care of her young on her
back, looking for prey outside the burrow. 
All tarantulas don't care for their young when the spiderlings gain independence when leaving the egg sac. Heck, even when the spiderlings are still inside the nest, the mother steps on them on accident. Tarantulas and most spiders are one of those animals who don't have the compassion to teach their children how to survive the real world. Spiders are solitary creatures and that even the most social groups of spider only guards the egg sacs for around one or two months. This is very harsh for the newborn spiders because they were basically left on their own since their birth and that their survival is extremely low that there might be a few that survive in the wild out of hundreds of siblings. Fathers, on the other hand are dead beat dads who say they're coming back from the store in a few hours. Spider fathers are not "compassionate" either. They either ran away after mating or the mother ate him. Sad world out there, huh?

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