The Sierra Cacachilas wandering spider named Califorctenus cacachilensis has thick, fang-like structures, hairy, inch-long body and legs stretching four inches across, researchers said.
Researchers, including those from San Diego Natural History Museum in the US, discovered the spider on a collaborative research expedition in 2013 into a small mountain range outside of La Paz in Baja California Sur, Mexico.
Four years later, after careful documentation and peer- review, researchers have deemed the species and genus as a new one.
Califorctenus cacachilensis is in the same group of spiders (Family Ctenidae) as the notoriously highly venomous Brazilian wandering spider, researchers said.
"I think it is a really pretty spider. The head and legs are kind of a chocolate brown. The abdomen is a dull yellow. And it's kind of plain, but very striking," Berrian was quoted as saying by 'Phys.Org'.
"The first evidence we found of this species was a shed exoskeleton in the cracks of a rock overhang. The exoskeleton was abnormally big and I could tell by the eye pattern that it was in a group of spiders, wandering spiders from the Family Ctenidae, with very few species in Baja California Sur," he said.
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