Program Night: Welcome to the World of Spiders - March 27 (Thursday)
| What | Monthly Meeting |
|---|---|
| When |
03-27-2008 from 06:30 pm to 09:00 pm |
| Where | ELWAS office, 308 4th Ave. S., Kirkland |
| Contact Name | Sunny Walter |
| Contact Email | sunny@sunnywalter.com |
| Contact Phone | 425-271-1346 |
| Add event to calendar |
|
Rod Crawford from the Burke museum will give us an introduction to spiders and debunk popular myths about these fascinating arachnids.
We are pleased to have as our speaker Rod Crawford from the
Burke museum, who will give us a beginner’s introduction to spiders and debunk
popular myths about these fascinating arachnids. Rod’s presentation includes a slide lecture
and is good for first grade level through adults. Audiences are encouraged to bring spiders
from home that they'd like identified.
Do you think you know something about spiders? The chances
are good that nearly everything you think you know is a myth! Spiders (nearly all harmless to humans) are
the earth's most numerous land predators. Our state is home to at least 900
spider species. This program will introduce you to spider diversity, habitats,
and behavior - all fascinating subjects.
Rod Crawford went to the University of Washington
in 1970 as an undergraduate -- and never left. His interest in spiders led him to volunteer
at the Burke Museum in 1971, and today he's the
curator of arachnids there. He has published widely on spiders, harvestmen, and
cave biology, and has edited Scarabogram (newsletter of The Scarabs) since late
1985. Rod recently completed six years on
the multi-disciplinary International Kuril Islands Project, the object of which
was to survey the flora and fauna of the remote Kuril Islands off the Pacific
coast of Siberia.
Holding thousands of live spiders in his bare hands has brought Rod a lifetime total of two real spider bites, both insignificant. Nonetheless, people keep telling him that spiders (who knows why) crawl into their beds and bite them every night! Such widespread foolishness recently led him to create the Spider Myths Web Site at http://www.washington.edu/burkemuseum/spidermyth/.
![]() | Please join us Thursday, March 27, for Rod’s captivating
presentation on spiders. Come at 6:30
for socializing and a musical slide show.
At 7:00, enjoy a brief monthly meeting and refreshments break, followed
by the main program at 7:45. The social hour, meeting, and presentation are free and open to the public. Invite a friend or anyone who wants to know more about spiders and their myths. Lynx Spider © Rod Crawford |
