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  1. Aug 3, 2024 · Are daddy longlegs spiders? Also called a harvestman, people often mistake them for spiders. Daddy longlegs do have similar qualities since, like spiders, they are classified as arachnids.

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    • Daddy Longlegs Aren't Spiders. First, daddy longlegs make up the order Opiliones and aren't spiders. They are arachnids, but so too are mites, ticks, and scorpions.
    • They Aren't Venomous. A common urban myth is that daddy longlegs have the most toxic venom of all spiders, but their fangs are too small to bite. Even if they were spiders, they don't have venom glands or fangs.
    • They Can't See Very Well. Daddy longlegs have simple eyes mounted on eye turrets attached to their bodies. These eyes act as light sensors and do not appear to provide more than blurry images.
    • They Are Ancient. The Opiliones first appeared a long time ago and have barely changed at all over millions of years. Fossils dating back 400 million years, before dinosaurs roamed the earth, look very similar to today's daddy longlegs.
  3. Jan 16, 2022 · You've probably heard this playground legend: Daddy longlegs are the most venomous spiders in the world, but their fangs are too short to bite you. Is this really true? The short answer: no.

  4. Jul 17, 2024 · Brits don't call them "daddy longlegs" for nothing. Just as advertised, mature crane flies do, in fact, have noticeably long legs. Sometimes, these appendages are twice the length of the insect's body. According to the Entomological Society of America, the biggest known crane fly displays a 10-inch (25.4-centimeter) leg span.

    • Are Daddy Long Legs a spider?1
    • Are Daddy Long Legs a spider?2
    • Are Daddy Long Legs a spider?3
    • Are Daddy Long Legs a spider?4
    • Are Daddy Long Legs a spider?5
    • Daddy longlegs aren’t spiders … Yes, they’re arachnids, but they’re actually more closely related to scorpions than they are to spiders. They don’t produce silk, have just one pair of eyes, and have a fused body (unlike spiders, which have a narrow “waist” between their front and rear).
    • And they’re not venomous. That thing you heard at summer camp about daddy longlegs being the most poisonous creature in the world, but with fangs too weak to bite you?
    • They’re very, very old. “We know from a very well preserved fossil of a daddy longlegs from Scotland that they are at least 400 million years old,” Clouse said.
    • Daddy longlegs go by a few other names. In North America, the reason for at least part of their name is pretty obvious—the species we see most frequently have very long, thin legs.
  5. Pholcus phalangioides, commonly known as the cosmopolitan cellar spider, long-bodied cellar spider or one of various types called a daddy long-legs spider, is a spider of the family Pholcidae. This is the only spider species described by the Swiss entomologist Johann Kaspar Füssli, who first recorded it in 1775. [ 1]

  6. Another creature often called daddy-longlegs is actually a spider. These long-legged spiders are in the family Pholcidae. Previously the common name of this family was the cellar spiders but arachnologists have also given them the moniker of "daddy-longlegs spiders" because of the confusion generated by the general public.

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