• Privacy Policy
  • Contact
Rio Vista Beacon
Mount Diablo Resource Recovery, Supporters of The Beacon
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Crime Log
    • Local News
    • Local Politics
    • Obituaries
    • Opinion
    • World

    Solano Land Trust Seeks Board and Committee Members With Natural Resource Expertise

    Wildflower and Critter Walks at Jepson Prairie Preserve

    Soroptimist Honor Andrea Cross-Pearson at Gala

    Soroptimist Honor MaryEllen Lamothe and Tami Mitchell at Gala

    Trending Tags

    • school
    • covid-19
    • trump
    • crime
  • Local Politics
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

    Heart Beats       

    Rio Goes Brazilian

    Rio Vista Resident, Returning to the Spotlight After 45 Years

    Rio Vista Resident, Returning to the Spotlight After 45 Years

    Twas the Night Before in Rio Vista

    Bounty of the County Celebrates Solano-Grown Food with Tours, Tastings & Farm-to-Table Dinners

    Bounty of the County Celebrates Solano-Grown Food with Tours, Tastings & Farm-to-Table Dinners

    AAA Expects Over 7 Million Californians to Travel This ThanksgivingTravel

    Trending Tags

    • food
    • school
    • students
    • transportation
    • education
  • Traffic
  • Weather
  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Crime Log
    • Local News
    • Local Politics
    • Obituaries
    • Opinion
    • World

    Solano Land Trust Seeks Board and Committee Members With Natural Resource Expertise

    Wildflower and Critter Walks at Jepson Prairie Preserve

    Soroptimist Honor Andrea Cross-Pearson at Gala

    Soroptimist Honor MaryEllen Lamothe and Tami Mitchell at Gala

    Trending Tags

    • school
    • covid-19
    • trump
    • crime
  • Local Politics
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

    Heart Beats       

    Rio Goes Brazilian

    Rio Vista Resident, Returning to the Spotlight After 45 Years

    Rio Vista Resident, Returning to the Spotlight After 45 Years

    Twas the Night Before in Rio Vista

    Bounty of the County Celebrates Solano-Grown Food with Tours, Tastings & Farm-to-Table Dinners

    Bounty of the County Celebrates Solano-Grown Food with Tours, Tastings & Farm-to-Table Dinners

    AAA Expects Over 7 Million Californians to Travel This ThanksgivingTravel

    Trending Tags

    • food
    • school
    • students
    • transportation
    • education
  • Traffic
  • Weather
  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
Rio Vista Beacon
No Result
View All Result
Home Entertainment Events

Bohart Museum to Celebrate Eight-Legged Encounters

Ready for "Eight-Legged Encounters?"

Kathy Keatley GarveybyKathy Keatley Garvey
March 9, 2026
in Events
0 0
0
Bohart Museum to Celebrate Eight-Legged Encounters

UC Davis doctoral candidate Emma "Em" Jochim shows Peaches, a Chilean rose-haired tarantula that can be viewed (but not held by the general public) at the Bohart Museum of Entomology open house, set from 1 to 4 p.m., Sunday, March 15. (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

  The Bohart Museum of Entomology will host an open house, themed “Eight-Legged Encounters” from 1 to 4 p.m., Sunday, March 15.

Chairing the event, which is free and family friendly, are doctoral candidate Emma “Em” Jochim of the Jason Bond lab and UC Davis alumnus Felix Duley, a Bohart Museum intern.

The open house will take place both in Room 1124 of the Academic Surge Building, 455 Crocker Lane, and in the hallway.

“We will have live arachnids–scorpions, tarantulas, a vinegaroon and a whip spider–and will do live feedings,” Jochim said. “The scorpion will be a desert hairy scorpion. We’ll have Peaches, a Chilean rose-hair tarantula, and we’ll have some native Aphonopelma species.  We will also have preserved specimens and will be answering questions people have about arachnids.”

At the live petting zoo, to be set up in the hallway, visitors can hold  Madagascar hissing cockroaches and stick insects, also known as walking sticks. Peaches, the rose-haired tarantula, is a fixture at the zoo, but is not available to be held by the public. The species is native to the grasslands of Chile, Argentina, Bolivia and Paraguay.

Also in the Academic Surge Building hallway, visitors will learn the different types of silk that spiders can make. Microscopes will be set up to see the specimens.

The family craft activity will involve “model magic clay so people can create their own arachnids to take home!” Jochim said.

Jochim is the lead author of internationally acclaimed research published last October in the journal Evolution and Ecology about a newly discovered species of trapdoor spider that inhabits coastal sand dunes stretching from Monterey to California Baja, Mexico.  Jochim and colleagues analyzed genomic DNA from two trapdoor spiders thought to be the same species, Aptostichus simu,  and discovered they are not.

Bond, director of the Bohart Museum and the Evert and Marion Schlinger Endowed Chair in Insect Systematics and executive associate dean, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences,  named the new species Aptostichus ramirezae after arachnologist Martina Giselle Ramirez, dean of the College of Science at California State University, Stanislaus.

The research article, titled “Speciation Pattern and Process in the California Coastal Dune Endemic Trapdoor Spider Aptostichus simus (Mygalomorphae: Euctenizidae) and Description of a New Cryptic Species,” is the work of Bond, Jochim, research scientist James Starrett, and Hanna Briggs, a 2025 UC Davis entomology graduate.

Trapdoor spiders are so named because they construct their burrows with a corklike or wafer trap door made of soil, vegetation and silk.  With the recent discovery, there are now four known species of trapdoor spiders in California that live in coastal dune habitats.

“My passion for studying spiders comes from how diverse and widespread they are,” Jochim said. “They are found on every continent except Antarctica and occupy almost every terrestrial niche! I think mygalomorphs are especially cool because of their larger sizes and long life spans–the oldest known trapdoor spider was 40 years old!”

Arachnophobia is a common phobia, but there are five good reasons to like spiders, says Bond, who serves as the president of the American Arachnological Association.

They are:

  1. Spiders consume 400-800 million tons of prey, mostly insects, each year. Humans consume somewhere around 400 million tons of meat and fish each year.
  2. Spider silk is one of the strongest naturally occurring materials. Spider silk is stronger than steel, stronger and more stretchy than Kevlar; a pencil thick strand of spider silk could be used to stop a Boeing 747 in flight.
  3. Some spiders are incredibly fast–able to run up to 70 body lengths per second (10X faster than Usain Bolt).
  4. Athough nearly all 47,000-plus spider species have venom used to kill their insect prey, very few actually have venom that is harmful to humans.
  5. Some spiders are really good parents –wolf spider moms carry their young on their backs until they are ready to strike out on their own; female trapdoor spiders keep their broods safe inside their burrows often longer than one year, and some female jumping spiders even nurse their spiderlings with a protein rich substance comparable to milk.

For more information on the open house, contact bmuseum@ucdavis.edu.

Kathy Keatley Garvey

Kathy Keatley Garvey

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Meet the Candidates!

October 3, 2020

Rio Vista Police Crime Log May 14 – May 21, 2021

May 31, 2021
OP-ED: Incompetence

OP-ED: Letter to the Editor

July 22, 2020
Holy Ghost Festa in Rio Vista This Sunday

Holy Ghost Festa in Rio Vista This Sunday

August 4, 2022

Rio Vista CARE/Family Resource Center

0
Beacon Travels to Montivideo, Uruguay

Beacon Travels to Montivideo, Uruguay

0
10 Years Since Beacon Publisher Passed Away

10 Years Since Beacon Publisher Passed Away

0
RioVision Gallery: Mother’s Day is Coming!

Soroptimist International of Rio Vista Empowers Women

0

March 9, 2026
Bohart Museum to Celebrate Eight-Legged Encounters

Bohart Museum to Celebrate Eight-Legged Encounters

March 9, 2026

Solano Land Trust Seeks Board and Committee Members With Natural Resource Expertise

March 4, 2026

Solano County Genealogical Society Next Speaker

March 4, 2026

Recent News

March 9, 2026
Bohart Museum to Celebrate Eight-Legged Encounters

Bohart Museum to Celebrate Eight-Legged Encounters

March 9, 2026

Solano Land Trust Seeks Board and Committee Members With Natural Resource Expertise

March 4, 2026

Solano County Genealogical Society Next Speaker

March 4, 2026

Rio Vista Beacon

The voice of Rio Vista

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • Business
  • City of Rio Vista
  • Crime Log
  • Entertainment
  • Events
  • Food
  • Health
  • Letter to the Editor
  • Lifestyle
  • Local News
  • Local Politics
  • News
  • Obituaries
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized
  • World

Recent News

March 9, 2026
Bohart Museum to Celebrate Eight-Legged Encounters

Bohart Museum to Celebrate Eight-Legged Encounters

March 9, 2026
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

© 2020 Rio Vista Beacon. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Google
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Sign Up with Google
OR

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Business
    • Crime Log
    • Local News
    • Local Politics
  • Local Politics
  • Entertainment
    • Events
    • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
  • Traffic
  • Weather
  • Advertise

© 2020 Rio Vista Beacon. All Rights Reserved.

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?
Go to mobile version