This video ranks spiders from least to most dangerous based on their venom potency, behavior, and impact on humans: Level 1 (Wolf Spider) causes psychological fear despite non-serious venom; Level 2 (Brown Widow) is globally invasive with neurotoxic venom causing muscle spasms; Level 3 (Black Widow) has venom 15 times more potent than rattlesnakes causing severe muscle pain and breathing difficulties; Level 4 (Redback) causes delayed respiratory failure in Australia; Level 5 (Brown Recluse) causes necrosis and tissue death from non-aggressive encounters; Level 6 (Brazilian Wandering Spider) is the world's most venomous with 20 times black widow potency, causing respiratory paralysis and priapism; Level 7 (Sydney Funnel Web) is the most dangerous, with toxins specifically targeting human nervous systems that can kill in 15 minutes, though antivenom developed in 1981 has reduced deaths to only one since then.
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7 Levels of DEADLIEST SPIDERS!Added:
Spiders didn't need to be this terrifying. Eight legs, eight eyes, and a seemingly personal vendetta against your nervous system. Here are the seven levels of deadliest spiders on the planet. Level one, the wolf spider.
Hollywood has given us generational fear about wolf spiders, but unlike the movies portray, the wolf spider isn't going to kill you. That's the good news.
The bad news is that it absolutely looks like it wants to, and it will make no effort whatsoever to convince you otherwise. Wolf spiders are large, hairy, fast-moving, and completely unbothered by your feelings about all of that. They don't spin webs and wait politely like civilized spiders. They hunt on foot, actively stalking their prey across the ground with a speed that is genuinely upsetting for something you just found under your couch cushion.
They have excellent eyesight, unusually good for a spider, and several of their eyes reflect light in the dark, like tiny green headlights, which is something you will think about at 3:00 a.m. for the rest of your life. If a wolf spider bites you, it will hurt.
There will be redness, swelling, and a general sense of betrayal. The venom is not considered medically serious in most healthy adults. Most cases resolve without drama. It's not the venom that earns this spider its place on the list.
It's the psychological damage of watching something that large move that fast in a direction you weren't expecting. The wolf spider is level one.
Not because of what it does to your body, but because of what it does to your brain. It plants something there.
Something that makes you check your shoes every single morning from that point forward. That's already doing quite a lot. Level two, the brown widow. You probably know the black widow. Who doesn't? The brown widow is her slightly less famous cousin who's been quietly building her web under your outdoor furniture for the past 3 years and would appreciate some acknowledgement. that the brown widow latroductus geometricus is found across the southern United States, Australia, Japan, South Africa, the Caribbean, and essentially everywhere that has outdoor furniture or old tires or the vague concept of clutter. She is highly adaptable. She is not fussy about real estate, and she has been spreading to new regions so consistently that scientists have started describing her as invasive in multiple places simultaneously. The brown widow is a global citizen with absolutely no permission to be one. Her venom is a neurotoxin. It causes pain at the bite site, muscle spasms, nausea, vomiting, and restlessness, and in serious cases, temporary cerebral or spinal paralysis.
The paralysis is usually not permanent, though there is always a grim asterisk on that. Usually, antivenenom exists and it works. Children, the elderly, and anyone with a compromised immune system are at substantially higher risk of serious outcomes. Here's the extra wrinkle. The brown widow's venom is actually more potent than that of the black widow, Graham 4 Graham. It's only slightly less dangerous overall because it injects less of it per bite. She is venomous, globally invasive, and hiding in exactly the kind of undisturbed, forgotten corners of your garden that you haven't checked since last summer.
She is doing fine. You might want to think about whether you are level three, the Black Widow. The Black Widow has been famous for decades. She has appeared in comics, films, and cultural metaphors so consistently that her reputation barely needs introduction.
What needs introducing is just how thoroughly the science backs it up. The black widow, primarily Latrodactus Mactans in North America, though the genus spans every continent except Antarctica, carries a venom that is reportedly 15 times more potent than a rattlesnakes. 15 times. The black widow is the size of a large grape. The rattlesnake is up to 8 feet long and sounds like a warning rattle before it does anything. One of those things has significantly stronger venom than the other and it is the one that fits in a matchbox. The venom causes a condition called latroductism.
Severe muscle pain and cramping, nausea, profuse sweating, chills, and partial paralysis of the diaphragm, which makes breathing genuinely labored and deeply unpleasant. The bite itself often feels like little more than a pin prick. You may not know something has gone wrong for up to an hour, by which point you're definitely going to know something has gone wrong. Deaths in the United States are rare and have largely been eliminated by access to antivenenom. But the black widow is found across an enormous range near ground level in dark and sheltered places and bites approximately 2,500 people in the US every year. Most victims recover. Most is a very loadbearing word in that sentence. The black widow is the spider with a reputation so precisely earned that it managed to become a household name without anyone needing to embellish anything. If you're enjoying the video, hit that like button and subscribe to the channel. If not, we'll send one of these spiders to hunt you. Level four, the redback spider. Australia has a spider for every occasion. You want something lurking under rocks. Australia has one. Under leagues, covered in your garden, your shed, your mailbox, the underside of a plastic chair you've had for 12 years without once checking underneath it. All taken care of. The red back is the one in the mailbox. The one under the chair, the one that has made Australians instinctively paranoid about any surface they haven't visually inspected within the last 20 minutes.
The redback is a close relative of the black widow and shares its neurotoxic toolkit. The females, because of course it's the females, are the dangerous ones. They're instantly recognizable.
Black body, red or orange stripe running down the back of the abdomen, sitting very still and doing absolutely nothing to suggest they're about to ruin your afternoon. They bite when disturbed, and given that they live in every imaginable piece of human furniture and infrastructure across Australia, they get disturbed with impressive frequency.
Around 2,000 confirmed bites are reported in Australia every year. The bite starts with local pain and swelling, then progresses to sweating, nausea, vomiting, and in serious cases, respiratory failure. What makes the redback particularly unnerving is the timeline. Symptoms don't always announce themselves immediately. Severe reactions can take hours to develop, meaning someone who feels fine after a bite may be considerably less fine by bedtime.
Antivenenom exists and has been available since 1956. Before that, deaths were not rare. The redback is the spider that taught an entire continent to check things before sitting on them.
And the lesson has stuck. Level five, the brown recluse. Most spiders want nothing to do with you. They sit in corners, mind their business, and ask only to be left alone to eat flies in peace. The brown recluse is in full agreement with this philosophy. It is not aggressive. It does not want a confrontation. And yet somehow the outcome of a brief accidental encounter with a brown recluse is in the worst cases that a portion of your body begins to die from the inside out. It is one of the more egregious examples of consequences being wildly disproportionate to intent. The brown recluse lives in dark, undisturbed places across the southern and midwestern United States. attics, basement, boxes that haven't been opened since the last move, the space behind the stored furniture, clothing that has been hanging undisturbed for a long time, which is how most bites happen.
Someone reaches for something they haven't touched in months, and the spider finding itself suddenly between fabric and skin does the only reasonable thing it can think of. You don't feel it immediately. The bite is often painless at first. That is the detail that makes the whole thing significantly worse.
Over the following hours, the bite sight becomes red and tender. A blister forms.
Then the venom, which contains a specific enzyme called sphingo melanise D, begins destroying tissue. Blood vessels near the wound collapse. The surrounding skin turns blue, then purple, then black. This is necrosis.
Dead tissue expanding outward from the bite sight. sometimes reaches into the underlying fat and muscle. The wound takes weeks or months to heal and frequently leaves a permanent crater-shaped scar. In severe cases, skin grafting is required. In children, systemic reactions can progress to fever, hemolytic anemia, organ failure, seizures, and death. And again, the brown recluse did not come looking for you. It was in a box or in a shoe or in a shirt you haven't worn since winter.
You came to it. It just responded in the only way its biology knows how. The brown recluse is not evil. It is simply a spider that carries catastrophic consequences for something that was never meant to be a confrontation. Level six, the Brazilian wandering spider.
Everything up to this point has been a spider that will bite you if you threaten it or sit on it or put your hand somewhere it happens to be. The Brazilian wandering spider is the spider that might just bite you anyway. It's not waiting for an invitation. It's already on its way. The name is not metaphorical. These spiders wander. They do not build webs and wait sedately for prey to arrive. They move across the forest floor at night, actively hunting.
And they have a documented habit of hiding in banana leaves during the day, which has resulted in them being accidentally exported across the world in fruit shipments and turning up in kitchens in countries that absolutely did not ask for them. They have been found in grocery stores. They have been found in people's homes. They have been found in situations that by every reasonable principle of spatial logic, they should not have been in. The Brazilian wandering spider finds a way.
According to Guinness World Records, Fonutria Farah is officially the world's most venomous spider. Its neurotoxin is reportedly around 20 times more potent than a black widows. Hundreds of bites are reported annually across South America. Symptoms include immediate searing pain, excessive salivation, irregular heartbeat, muscle tremors, rapid heart rate, vomiting, and in severe cases, complete respiratory paralysis. Death without antivenenom is a real and documented outcome. There is one additional symptom. It is medically documented. It is involuntary, sustained, and deeply inconvenient. The venom of the Brazilian wandering spider causes priapism, a painful prolonged erection in male victims that can last for hours. Scientists have actually studied this as a possible treatment for erectile dysfunction, which may be the most unexpected sentence in the history of medical research. The spider that might kill you is also inadvertently contributing to pharmaceutical science.
Nature contains multitudes. Level seven, the Sydney funnel web spider. Of all the spiders in the world, the Sydney funnel web spider has been described by scientists as the world's most venomous spider. Interestingly enough, it's one of the spiders that Australia somehow managed to produce in a major metropolitan area and simply get on with life around. The Sydney funnel web spider is the final boss of this list and it earned that position by covering every single criterion for danger with a level of thoroughess that seems personal. First, the venom. The funnel webb's toxin contains a compound called robust toxin or delta attratoxin which specifically and catastrophically attacks the human nervous system. The bizarre part is that this toxin barely affects most other mammals. Cats and dogs and rabbits can tolerate funnel web bites with relatively minor consequences. But in humans and other primates, it fires every nerve simultaneously. Sweating, salivation, muscle spasms, nausea, extreme hypertension, rapid heart rate, respiratory failure, and death. Before antivenenom was developed in 1981, 13 people died from confirmed funnel web bites. Experts have noted that a bite to the torso where no tourniquet can be applied can be fatal in as little as 15 minutes. 15 minutes. Second, the personality. The Sydney funnel web is not a spider that runs away when startled. When threatened, it rears up on its hind legs, raises its front limbs into the air, and displays its fangs in a posture that communicates its intentions with remarkable clarity. If you don't leave, it grabs hold and bites repeatedly, holding on. It doesn't do dry bites the way more cooperative spiders might. When a funnel web commits, it commits fully. The fangs are large enough to pierce a human fingernail straight through. Your fingernail is not a deterrent. It is not even a meaningful obstacle. Third, the location. This spider lives in the greater Sydney area, one of the most densely populated cities in the southern hemisphere. It comes inside during wet weather. It falls into swimming pools and can survive the immersion for up to 24 hours, while trapped air bubbles keep it breathing. It lives in rock gardens, under logs, in the shrubbery, and around the foundations of suburban houses.
Males go wandering at night in the warmer months in search of females, which is exactly when humans are outdoors barefoot or reaching into the garden after dark without a torch. The most venomous spider in the world in the world's most bite friendly city sharing the same post code. Australia reviewed this arrangement and decided it was fine. The antivenenom introduced in 1981 has been enormously effective. There's been only one confirmed death since its introduction, attributed to a delayed hospital presentation. The spider went from national menace to manageable risk in a single medical development. But that risk management depends entirely on having access to antivenenom, applying pressure bandaging immediately and reaching a hospital. In 1980, those things were not guaranteed. In parts of the world without well-resourced trauma centers, they still aren't. The Sydney funnel web sits at level seven, not just because of what it is, but because of what it would be without the medical infrastructure built specifically to counteract it. Remove the antivenenom, and this animal is capable of killing a healthy adult in the time it takes to watch half an episode of television. It is the most dangerous spider on Earth.
It lives in a suburb. It will rear up and face you down if you get too close.
And every summer, the Australian Reptile Park runs a public appeal asking people to carefully collect male funnel webs they find wandering into their homes and bring them in alive so venom can be milked to make more antivenenom.
Australians comply. They collect them.
They drive to the park. This is just something people do there. This is Tuesday in Sydney.
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