Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Pale Windscorpion

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Wind scorpions get their name because they are "fast like the wind". While related to scorpions, they fit into their own category or arachnids which also includes spiders. These highly aggressive solitary predators live in very dry, arid habitats where they hunt at night by actively zigzagging across across the ground or sand until they encounter and overpower an unfortunate insect, spider, scorpion or even the occasional lizard. Once pinned down with the two large front legs (pedipalps), the wind scorpion doesn't even wait to kill its prey. It will immediately start tearing into its meal with the two dark pincers near the mouth (they look like fangs) and devour it as quickly as possible, before the wind scorpion might in turn become the prey of some even larger predator. This one was stalked/chased and photographed in rural Cibola County, New Mexico, about 70 miles west of Albuquerque.

Copyright
©2017
Image Size
3174x4756 / 20.7MB
www.leightonphotography.com
Keywords
America, American Southwest, Animalia, Arachnida, Arthropoda, Arthropods, Cibola County, Dromopoda, El Malpais National Monument, Eremobates pallipes, Eremobatidae, Grant, National Monument, New Mexico, Solifugae, Solifugid, USA, United States, animal, arachnid, arthropod, biting, bug, camel spider, critter, desert, invertebrate, pale windscorpion, predator, scorpion, southwest, spider, spring, state park, summer, sun spider, sunspider, ugly, vicious, wildlife, wind scorpion, windscorpion
Contained in galleries
Solifugids (Sunspiders)
Wind scorpions get their name because they are "fast like the wind". While related to scorpions, they fit into their own category or arachnids which also includes spiders. These highly aggressive solitary predators live in very dry, arid habitats where they hunt at night by actively zigzagging across across the ground or sand until they encounter and overpower an unfortunate insect, spider, scorpion or even the occasional lizard. Once pinned down with the two large front legs (pedipalps), the wind scorpion doesn't even wait to kill its prey. It will immediately start tearing into its meal with the two dark pincers near the mouth (they look like fangs) and devour it as quickly as possible, before the wind scorpion might in turn become the prey of some even larger predator. This one was stalked/chased and photographed in rural Cibola County, New Mexico, about 70 miles west of Albuquerque.