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Encyclopedia > Harvestmen
Opiliones

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Arachnida
Order: Opiliones

The Phalangids or Opiliones (better known as "harvestmen" or "daddy longlegs") are eight-legged invertebrate animals belonging to the order Opiliones in the class Arachnida, in the subphylum Chelicerata of the phylum Arthropoda. As of 2000, over 5,000 species of Phalangids have been described worldwide.


The name "daddy longlegs" can also refer to two other unrelated arthropods: the crane fly (Tipulidae) and the cellar spider (Pholcidae).


Physical description

These harmless arachnids are known for their exceptionally long walking legs, compared to body size. The difference between harvestmen and spiders is that in harvestmen the two main body sections (the prosoma and opisthosoma) are nearly joined, so that they appear to be one structure. They have two eyes, oriented sideways. They have scent glands that secrete a peculiar smelling fluid when disturbed. Harvestmen do not have poison or silk glands.


Most species live for a year or two.


Behavior

Many species are omnivorous, eating primarily small insects; some are scavengers. Mating involves direct copulation, rather than the deposition of a spermatophore.


A poisonous myth

There is an urban legend claiming that the daddy longlegs is the most poisonous spider in the world, only its fangs are too small to bite a human, and is thus not actually dangerous. This is untrue on several counts. First, of course, phalangids are not spiders. Many species don't have any poison glands at all. Of those that do, the venom appears to be far less toxic than that of a black widow spider. The size of the fangs varies by species, of course, but even those with relatively long fangs do not bite humans (or other large creatures). The urban legend is probably due to confusion with the Daddy long-legs spider, which can indeed bite and is indeed poisonous, but not dangerously so. More can be read on the debunking of this myth on the Daddy long-legs spider page.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Harvestmen (402 words)
Harvestmen, sometimes called harvest spiders, are often confused with the true spiders, but are easily distinguished from the latter by their globular body which has no obvious constriction or 'waist' between the front section (the cephalothorax or prosoma) and the hind section (the abdomen or opisthosoma).
Harvestmen possess the usual arachnid appendages - chelicerae (jaws) and palps (leg-like sensory structures) at the front, and four pairs of walking legs articulated to the cephalothorax.
Harvestmen feed on a wide range of living and dead animal matter, mainly comprised of small invertebrates (insect larvae, mites, young spiders, etc., or their dead remains), although they sometimes also attack juicy plant matter, primarily for its water content.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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