Sensitivity Training for Eight-Legged Exhibits
Librado Romero/The New York Times
By HENRY FOUNTAIN
IN a workroom on the fifth floor of the American Museum of Natural History in New York, six tarantulas are about to undergo sensitivity training.
The creatures, of a desert species called Chilean rose hairs for their
tinted furry legs, are expected to have a starring role in a new
exhibition, “Spiders Alive!”, that opens in late July. They will be
picked up and displayed by trained staff members and volunteers to give
visitors a closer look.
But to ensure that the tarantulas can handle all that handling, they need to be prepared.
“Spiders feel their world around them from vibrations and from
movements,” said Hazel Davies, the museum’s director of living exhibits.
Although Chilean rose hairs are among the most easygoing and benign of
tarantulas — they rarely bite and their venom is not particularly
dangerous — unfamiliar vibrations can make them skittish. So Ms. Davies
and her assistants will start by removing the lids from the spiders’
terrariums and talking over them, so they feel the vibrations of speech.
If they can deal with that, some light touching will follow. “We’ll
work through stages of being able to just pick them up,” she said.
The need to train spiders is just one of the challenges involved in
exhibiting living organisms at a museum that is more accustomed to
dealing with fossils and preserved specimens. Like many other natural
science museums, in recent years the American Museum of Natural History
has found that live exhibits are another way to engage visitors.
“It’s just another dimension of how we bring nature inside,” said
Michael J. Novacek, the museum’s provost. “It’s so important in an urban
environment, because a lot of people who come into the institution will
never see or experience nature in the same way.” The museum has found
that live exhibits — starting with its butterfly conservatory, now in
its 14th year — are extremely popular.
Of the new exhibit, Norman I. Platnick, the museum’s curator of spiders,
said, “I’ve always argued that it would draw as many people as the
dinosaurs, if not more.”
Mr. Platnick, who has been at the museum since 1973, had long lobbied
for a permanent hall devoted to spiders, insects and other arthropods.
Not having one, he said, “is a major gap for a major natural history
museum.” On a few occasions plans were drawn up, he recalled, “but when
people took a hard look at what it would cost to construct such a hall,
the project always went away.”
The new exhibition, which museum officials say will run every other
year, will be relatively small and will focus on spiders and other
arachnids, including scorpions. “But that’s fine because I don’t have to
deal with insects that I don’t know anything about,” Mr. Platnick said.
Still, planning for the exhibit has been complicated, involving frequent
discussions among curators, display designers and Ms. Davies. A basic
issue has been which of the roughly 42,000 recognized species of spiders
to put on display.
“Obviously what I would love to have is the largest diversity possible,”
Mr. Platnick said. “We hope to have all kinds of ordinary spiders — sea
wolf spiders, jumping spiders, fishing spiders — and some of the more
unusual things you wouldn’t come across in this part of the world.”
“The difficulty is merging a live organism exhibit with our standard exhibitionary techniques,” he said.
Many spiders are so small they would be difficult for visitors to see.
Most are nocturnal and do not move much during the day. So the exhibit
will rely on videos of some species that are not practical to exhibit.
Live specimens will be behind glass, Ms. Davies said. “It’s a case of
thinking about the display habitats that we’re going to set up for them
and how that’s going to work so that it will be comfortable for the
spider but so that people can also engage with them and actually see
something,” she said. Two trapdoor spiders, for example, burrow into
soil. For visitors to be able to see the burrows the display has to be
designed something like an ant farm, so that the spiders will burrow
against the glass. Even then the burrows may quickly become lined with
silk.
Another challenge will be keeping some specimens alive until the exhibit
closes in early December. Most spiders are seasonal — they hatch in the
spring, grow in the summer and die well before their first birthday.
“Trying to prolong these things very far into the fall will be
problematic because they will be getting to their normal age
limitations,” Mr. Platnick said.
Other species may be difficult to obtain in the first place. “It’s a
challenge between what has an interesting story but what will also make a
good display animal and what we can get without trekking off to Borneo
or somewhere and taking it out of the wild,” Ms. Davies said. Some may
not survive shipping, even overnight.
Mr. Platnick has been sending out feelers to his friends in academia in
search of specimens. The trapdoor spiders came from a colleague in
Alabama. Members of the most primitive spider family, the liphistiidae,
are found only in the wild in Southeast Asia, but Mr. Platnick knows a
scientist in Switzerland who has two of them. A postdoctoral researcher
at the museum who is going to Europe in June will bring them back.
Many spiders come from domestic breeders. Ms. Davies recently picked up
several ornamental tarantulas, including some gooty sapphires, from a
breeder on Long Island (“We did a handover since it was so close,” she
said. “It’s quicker and less stressful for the animals.”) The Chilean
rose hairs were shipped from Ohio.
The tarantulas are all females, because they tend to be larger and live
longer than males (although most tarantulas, male or female, can live
for many years). Ms. Davies keeps a stock of live crickets and
cockroaches on hand to feed the rose hairs and others, which sit in
terrariums (alone, as spiders tend to eat roommates) on both sides of
the workroom and in the hall.
For the Chilean rose hairs and other docile species, the handlers will play an important role.
“This is different from anything we’ve done before,” said Ms. Davies,
whose department is in charge of training the handlers. “We’ve never had
a set-up demonstration area where we can have the animals out and have
somebody there doing an interactive show.”
In all, at least 14 large spiders will be available for the
demonstrations. “They’ll work a half a day each and then they’ll rest,”
Ms. Davies said. “Good work if you can get it, right?”
No comments:
Post a Comment