Original photo by Bankim Desai/ Unsplash

Scientists have been putting names to species for hundreds of years, with Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus revolutionizing science with his binomial system — the foundation of modern taxonomy — in the 1750s. And while it may seem unlikely that any species could escape our gaze after centuries of searching, it turns out Mother Nature is pretty good at hide-and-seek. Today, scientists are aware of 1.7 million species, from the simple sea sponge to the gargantuan African bush elephant, yet estimates suggest there could be several million more species left to discover, or more. In fact, we may only know about 20% of all the species that are out there. Many of these yet-to-be-discovered animals live in some of the hardest-to-reach places, such as dense rainforests or the depths of the ocean. And many of them are incredibly tiny. 

All arachnids are spiders.

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“Arachnid” likely conjures up images of our favorite eight-legged friends, but there are other members of this creepy-crawly family. Mites, ticks, harvestmen, and scorpions are some of the other creatures that fall under the arachnid umbrella, alongside spiders.

Take, for instance, the spider. In April 2022, scientists announced that they’d discovered their 50,000th species of spider, Guriurius minuano, a member of the Salticidae family of jumping spiders. Found in the shrubs and trees of some parts of Brazil, Uruguay, and Argentina, this spider is one of over 6,000 jumping spiders already discovered — and it won’t be the last. According to the World Spider Catalog maintained at the Natural History Museum of Bern in Switzerland, Guriurius minuano is only the halfway point, as they expect another 50,000 spiders will be discovered in the next 100 years. Thanks to evolution, genetic mutation, and the many mysteries of nature, the work Linnaeus began so many years ago may never truly end.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year Swede Carl Alexander Clerck published the text that gave spiders their first modern scientific names
1757
U.S. box-office gross for the 1990 film “Arachnophobia”
$53,208,180
Estimated number of plant and animal species discovered every year
18,000
Length (in feet) of the CGI version of Shelob, the hobbit-hungry spider from “The Lord of the Rings”
8

Young spiders are known as ______.

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Young spiders are known as spiderlings.

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Spiders could eat all humans in a year (not that they want to).

The world is full of itsy bitsy spiders, but those spiders have big appetites. According to some estimates, the world plays host to a collective 25 million tons of spiders, and a 2017 study concluded that those spiders eat between 400 million and 800 million metric tons (485 million to 970 million U.S. tons) of food a year. To put that staggering number into perspective, all of the adult humans on Earth weigh only 287 million tons. Luckily, humans are not the target of spiders’ voracious appetites. Instead, spiders prefer insects — though lizards, birds, and even mice can also be on the menu. Let’s hope, for all our sakes, that it stays that way.

Darren Orf
Writer

Darren Orf lives in Portland, has a cat, and writes about all things science and climate. You can find his previous work at Popular Mechanics, Inverse, Gizmodo, and Paste, among others.