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		<title>Not so deadly? Chance Tulsa spider misidentified</title>
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		<description>angelm's Blog: Not so deadly? Chance Tulsa spider misidentified</description>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Not so deadly? Chance Tulsa spider misidentified</title>
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			<pubDate>Fri, 20 Mar 2009 16:11:26 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>angelm</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Not so deadly? Chance Tulsa spider misidentified<br /><br />TULSA, Okla. A spider that was found in a Tulsa grocery store may not have been as deadly as originally thought.<br /><br />The spider found in a shipment of bananas at Whole Foods was taken Sunday to the University of Tulsa, where animal facilities manager Terry Childs identified it as a Brazilian wandering spider, considered one of the most lethal in the world.<br /><br />But Barry Downer, the curator of aquariums and herpetology at the Tulsa Zoo, said video and photos he had seen of the spider led him to believe that it was a Huntsman spider, which is harmless to humans.<br /><br />There&#x27;s pretty definitive evidence it has been misidentified, Downer said.<br /><br />Childs said Wednesday night that he had destroyed the spider at the urging of a university administrator because of safety concerns.<br /><br />Downer said the spider should have been preserved for study, but he was told that the body would not be made available.<br /><br />It doesn&#x27;t make any sense to me why it wouldn&#x27;t be saved, he said.<br /><br />A school spokesman said Thursday that the university is looking into how and why the spider was destroyed.<br /><br />Richard Grantham, director of the plant disease and insect diagnostics lab at Oklahoma State University, also said the spider should not have been destroyed.<br /><br />After looking at pictures of the spider, he said he does not believe it to be a Brazilian wandering spider, but he said it should have been preserved anyway.<br /><br />We preserve it, Grantham said. We don&#x27;t destroy it.<br /><br />A similar incident happened at a Stillwater grocery store in 2003, Grantham said.<br /><br />He kept the spider in a cage at the university lab until it died, and he still has the preserved body, he said.<br /><br />Downer and Grantham also disputed Childs&#x27; characterization of the danger of a Brazilian wandering spider.<br /><br />Death from the spider&#x27;s bite is rare, and only victims with compromised immune systems, such as babies or older people, would be at risk, they said.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="/blogentry/28326">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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