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Scorpions: there is a great variety of them but in general there are about 1400 species

known around the world. They reach sizes between nine millimeters and 21 centimeters
from the emperor scorpions. They preferentially inhabit sandy or rocky terrains or on
tropical and desert surfaces. A minority are arboreal climbers, erratic or cave-dwelling and
maintain commensal or synanthropic relationships in the vicinity of human dwellings, for
which only a negligible number of species can be deadly. At the same time, a division of
the forms that was already resolved for the Carboniferous began or at the latest in the
Devonian, something more than 325 million years ago. Of this time are almost all
scorpions known for their fossil remains, the largest of which came to measure more than
eighty-five centimeters.

Blue rings octopus: Hapalochlaena is a genus of cephalopod mollusks of the order of


octopods commonly known as blue-ringed octopuses. It includes four species of small
octopi that live in the pools of sea water in the Pacific Ocean, from Japan to Australia.
Despite their small size, they are commonly recognized as one of the most poisonous
animals in the world.1 They are known for their distinctive blue and black rings and for
their yellowish skin. Hunt small crabs, hermit crabs, and prawns. It is one of the most
poisonous and dangerous animals.

Brown recluse spider: The brown recluse spider measures 1 to inches (2.5 to 3.5 cm).
These spiders have a dark brown violin-shaped mark on the upper part of the body, and
light brown legs. The lower part of your body can be dark brown, cinnamon, yellow or a
greenish color. Additionally, they have 3 pairs of eyes instead of the 4 pairs that other
spiders usually have. The bite of a brown recluse spider is poisonous. The kind of insects
that the brown recluse spider belongs to, has the largest number of known poisonous
species.

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