Species: Davus pentaloris
Common name: Tiger Rump Tarantula
Native range: Mexico (Chiapas), Guatemala
Temperature: Room temperature (24–26°C), with a slight night-time drop
Humidity: 70–80%
Adult size: Females reach 4–5 cm in body length
Lifestyle: Terrestrial
Speed: Moderate
Venom potency: Mild
Temperament: Calm
Recommended for: Keepers of all experience levels
Notes: Not listed under CITES — no captive-bred documentation required
Davus pentaloris
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Description
Davus pentaloris comes from the humid tropical forests straddling the Mexico–Guatemala border — a landscape of deep canopy and warm, filtered light. The species carries that warmth in its colouration: a rich reddish-brown base broken by clean lighter banding down each leg, the pattern arranged with a symmetry that reads as almost deliberate. Compact and solidly built without looking heavy, this is a spider that holds your attention precisely because nothing about its appearance feels accidental.
In temperament, Davus pentaloris belongs to that rare category of Central American terrestrials that seem genuinely unbothered by the world around them. It isn't skittish, rarely throws a threat posture, and doesn't bolt for the hide the moment the enclosure is opened. It moves through its space with a settled confidence — using its hide readily, feeding reliably, growing at a measured pace. For a keeper who wants a species that rewards quiet observation rather than constant management, that calm disposition is the whole point.
Husbandry is refreshingly uncomplicated. A terrestrial setup with 5–7 cm of coconut fibre substrate, a hide, and a water dish covers the essentials. Moderate humidity maintained through occasional misting keeps the animal comfortable without demanding precision. Room temperature is sufficient, and the species asks for little else beyond appropriately sized prey and the patience to watch it settle into its environment.
Davus pentaloris suits keepers at any level who want something quieter than the hobby's most familiar names without giving up visual appeal or ease of care. It sits close enough to the beaten path to be manageable, yet far enough off it that a well-settled adult in a thoughtfully arranged enclosure tends to draw a particular kind of question from visiting hobbyists — not "what is that?" but "where can I get one?"