Short Wave - Climate Change Could Alter Spidey Love
Episode Date: August 6, 2025Every September, the small town of La Junta, Colorado puts on a whole festival to celebrate a beloved local animal: the tarantula! Around this time of year, thousands of mature male tarantulas start t...o migrate en masse – but until recently, scientists didn’t know what triggered them to move out of their cozy burrows. On today’s show, biologist Dallas Haselhuhn explains how they solved the mystery, and how climate change could affect future treks.Want to hear about more critter mysteries? Email us and let us know at shortwave@npr.org.Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.Listen to Short Wave on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.This episode was produced by Berly McCoy and edited by Rebecca Ramirez. Tyler Jones checked the facts. Robert Rodriguez was the audio engineer.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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You're listening to Shortwave from NPR.
Hey, shortwavers, Emily Kwong here, and today we're going on a road trip.
To the Cananshi National Grasslands of southeastern Colorado, near La junta, where if you drive down a dusty road in early fall.
Usually right around sunrise or sunset, you'll start seeing these little shadows that look like rocks crossing the road.
More and more will appear.
And ecologist Dallas Hasselhoun says pretty soon you realize these moving shadows are not rocks.
They are tarantulas.
Slowly meandering their way across the asphalt as you're driving at highway speeds, trying your best, hopefully, to avoid them.
Tarantulas are a group of large hairy spiders that I think are quite cute up close.
But feel free to debate me on that.
These tarantulas in Colorado are on a mission.
Once a year from mid-September to mid-October,
Colorado brown tarantulas leave their boroughs in mass to find a mate.
These wanderers are sexually mature males crossing the road
as the cars try to dodge them.
When Dallas was a tarantula researcher at Eastern Michigan University,
Shillington Arachnid Laboratory,
they remember the first time they saw these arachnids in the wild.
And I was like a kid in the candy shop.
The second I saw one, I pulled over immediately, and I jumped out and I just ran straight to it.
Time stopped, like a slow-motion love scene with the tarantulas running to find a mate and Dallas running to find them.
It felt like I was running through the wildflowers in the grasslands, finally seeing something, because I had only worked with tarantulas in a lab setting.
This was my first time seeing wild ones, and it was beautiful.
It was everything you could imagine.
The tarantula migration is so beloved in the local community
that every year, Tarantula Fest takes over downtown Lahunta.
Dallas has been a parade judge and loves it.
It was hard not to continually get choked up,
given the reputations of tarantulas,
and seeing a whole community come around to celebrate them.
But despite the public embrace of tarantulas,
very little is known about what triggers.
this massive migration-like event.
We lack such basic knowledge of their life history.
No one had gotten out and done the gritty, dirty fieldwork to actually see,
is there something that's triggering these males to go and mate seek?
So Dallas did what scientists do and got dirty.
Today on the show, a tarantula migration mystery.
What causes thousands of male tarantulas to leave their cozy burrows after years of being homebodies,
And how is public opinion about tarantulas changing?
I'm Emily Kwong and you're listening to Shortwave, the science podcast from NPR.
Okay, Dallas, so we're talking today about tarantulas and they have a pretty interesting life cycle.
Can you just explain how male tarantulas are hanging out in the years prior to this big day that they go on this quest?
Yeah, absolutely.
So males will hatch out of their mom's egg sack.
And then all baby tarantulas, when they're ready to leave their mom's burrow,
they'll leave in a single file line.
And then one will break off from that line, and a handful will follow.
And then one will break off from that line.
And they do this weird fractal pattern.
We still have no idea what they're doing that for.
It might be a dispersal mechanism.
And then the tarantulas do the most boring thing in the world,
right as their babies.
they dig a hole and then they sit there from anywhere between three to ten years before they
sexually mature. The other fun fact that I love to share is tarantulas are very cleanly.
When they eat, they'll have to liquefy their prey. You know, they make a protein shake out of their food
and they slurp them up and then all tarantulas have these little mustaches, kind of like
baleen in a whale. And what they'll do is once they're done eating, they will sit there and meticulously
clean that, make sure there's no food crumbs left in their mustache. And then whatever leftovers they
have, they'll wrap up in their silk. They're really model citizens. They are. They are.
All right. So you encountered these tarantulas at the moment that the male tarantulas emerge from
their burrows to make this mass journey. What did you find in your research? Yeah. So I went out there
a couple of weeks before I had kind of a hunch the males would start coming out.
And I went out to the grassland every day, four times a day.
I went out there right before sunrise, sometime in the morning, at the exact heat of the day,
and then I went back out right around dusk.
And I just counted tarantulas.
But I didn't see any males until early September there was this cold snap where the temperature dropped,
significantly. And then all of a sudden, I saw 20 to 30 tarantulas after seeing none for weeks.
And then fewer and fewer and fewer over the next couple of days. And then there was another
cold snap in late September. And all of a sudden, I saw around 50 to 60 tarantulas in a day.
And it also happened to be a really, really hot day. So it was a whiplash as far as temperatures
are concerned.
Hmm.
And then over the course of the next couple of weeks, all through October, less and less
tarantulas until I was literally out there finding frozen tarantulas on the ground in the
mornings.
What is the leading reason you think that the cold is correlated to this movement?
Yeah.
What I think is happening, if I wanted to like kind of anthropomorphize them a little bit,
is that they're sitting.
and they're in the sweltering heat going,
I do not want to come out of this burrow.
It is so hot.
And then it gets really cold very quickly,
and it's making them go, oh, no, I got to go find a mate.
I'm sexually mature.
This is my last hurrah.
Male tarantulas actually die
after they've sexually matured within about a year.
Oh.
So this is quite literally their last hurrah.
And that cold snap is getting, you know,
kicking them in the butts.
Yeah.
Just to close out the life cycles of tarantula a little bit,
once these males find their lady and they mate, what happens to them?
So if you're a male tarantula,
ideally what you want to happen is you mate
and then you're able to skedaddle,
get out of there as quick as possible,
and go find another female.
Unfortunately, as the mating season goes on,
the males are using more and more of their reserve energy.
Typically during a mating season, males aren't really eating or even drinking.
And they get weaker and weaker.
And eventually, if they are mating pretty regularly and successfully, they're a little too slow on the draw.
And the female decides that she wants a nice dinner to go along with the date.
And she clamps down on the male.
We had, we also tracked males.
You put this little tiny radio transmitter on.
on their backs.
And we quickly found that it was pretty hard to track them down because they would be half
eaten inside the female's burrow.
And we'd have to dig up the burrow to get our, yeah, we'd have to dig up their burrows
to get the transmitter back.
And then, you know, make it a little bit nice for the female again, so we're not destroying
her home.
Okay.
So after doing your master's thesis, I imagine your appreciation of tarantulas has only deepened.
And I want to pass that along to our listeners.
What role do torrentials play in their ecosystems?
Yeah, so we don't know what we don't know.
These tarantulas could be contributing quite a lot to their ecosystems,
but we don't even know what's triggering their mating season.
As soon as you start bringing up tarantulas, the question then becomes, well,
do we really care about them?
What are they actually doing?
And the answer is, we really don't know.
There's a book written in the 1950s called The Tarantula that points out this lack of information.
And it is a wonderful little read.
It is full of old-timey science lingo.
And since then, we still lack the majority of that information.
You know, I'm struck by the date of this book, too, because the movie, the horror movie, Tarantula, came out in 1955.
And I'm just wondering, why do you think we know so little about tarantulas?
Because some of this stuff does seem very basic.
Yeah.
And I think what it is, if you'll allow me to get on a slight soapbox here, I think what it is is just cultural ideas of tarantulas and their importance.
You know, people love birding in their backyards.
We set up bird feeders and things like that.
People love hearing about, you know, anything that's big and fuzzy.
Tarantulas have this scare factor.
And I just like to point out that tarantulas are little and fuzzy, you know.
But because there's been this push a lot more recently, I think,
where people are starting to love, whether it's ironic or not, you know, the creepy crawlies, the outcasts,
you know, the roly-pollies are getting a lot more popular, things like bats.
Bats have had a huge cultural shift over the past, you know, two decades.
They went from being the scary creatures of the night that Dracula called to being people affectionately calling them sky puppies and things like that.
And I think we're seeing that with a lot of other creepy crawlies like tarantulas.
There clearly has been a major shift.
Yeah.
And it's in no doubt because of scientists like yourself providing this information.
So now that we know that these tarantulas need to.
cold snap to trigger their mating behavior.
How are you feeling about climate change?
Yeah.
And so one of the aspects of my research that I deliberately chose was the population that I
looked at near La Hanta, Colorado, is on the northernmost edge of this species range.
And we often find that these edge populations act as like a stronghold for that species
because they're subject to more climatic variations.
And so as climate change starts warming these areas up
or we start just seeing much different climactic variation,
I would expect that this group of tarantulas
actually ends up being able to be that stronghold for the species
because they're used to such swings in temperature.
That's my speculation without more so,
knowing basic life history about them.
Dallas, thank you so much for coming on the show.
Thank you very much for having me. I appreciate it.
Shortwavers, myself and the team have been creating episodes for you for almost six years.
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This episode was produced by Burley McCoy.
It was edited by our showrunner Rebecca Ramirez and fact-checked by Tyler Jones.
Robert Rodriguez was the audio engineer.
Beth Donovan is our senior director and Colin Campbell is our senior vice president of podcasting strategy.
I'm Emily Kwong.
Thank you for listening to Shortwave from NPR.
