Scorpions are members of the class Arachnida and are
closely related to spiders, mites, and ticks. They are commonly thought of as
desert dwellers, but they also live in Brazilian forests, British Columbia,
North Carolina, and even the Himalayas. These hardy, adaptable arthropods have
been around for hundreds of millions of years, and they are nothing if not
survivors.
There are almost 2,000 scorpion species, but
only 30 or 40 have strong enough poison to kill a person. The many types of
venom are effectively tailored to their users' lifestyles, however, and are
highly selected for effectiveness against that species' chosen prey.
Scorpions typically eat insects, but their
diet can be extremely variable—another key to their survival in so many harsh
locales. When food is scarce, the scorpion has an amazing ability to slow its
metabolism to as little as one-third the typical rate for arthropods. This
technique enables some species to use little oxygen and live on as little as a
single insect per year. Yet even with lowered metabolism, the scorpion has the
ability to spring quickly to the hunt when the opportunity presents itself—a
gift that many hibernating species lack.
Such survival skills allow scorpions to live
in some of the planet's toughest environments. Researchers have even frozen
scorpions overnight, only to put them in the sun the next day and watch them
thaw out and walk away. But there is one thing scorpions have a difficult time
living without—soil. They are burrowing animals, so in areas of permafrost or
heavy grasses, where loose soil is not available, scorpions may not be able to
survive.
Type:
Bug
Diet:
Carnivore
Average life span in the wild:
3 to 8 years
Size:
Average, 2.5 in (6 cm); Largest, 8.3 in (21 cm)
Did you know?
Scientists
aren't sure why, but scorpions are fluorescent under ultraviolet light.
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