I LOVE ARACHNIDS!!! EVERYONE SHOULD LOVE ARACHNIDS!!!!!
So far i’ve found 11 of the 13 currently recognized living arachnid orders in the wild. Someday I hope to find all of them!

seen from Malaysia
seen from Switzerland
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Martinique

seen from Netherlands
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Malaysia
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Switzerland
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
I LOVE ARACHNIDS!!! EVERYONE SHOULD LOVE ARACHNIDS!!!!!
So far i’ve found 11 of the 13 currently recognized living arachnid orders in the wild. Someday I hope to find all of them!
the transparent bugposting will continue until morale improves part 14/??
(all from photographs taken by me)
A few days ago I posted a dead yellow jacket which had become a community meal for Paratemnoides social pseudoscorpions, but I hadn't really considered that they are apparently capable of teaming up and catching a live one?? Checked on them later and the unfortunate wasp was deceased. Damn.
Theoretically there's a certain amount of pseudoscorpions which could take down a mammal, that's what I've learned here
This is a pseudo scorpion of some kind, I think? Neat but unfortunately found inside. I relocated.
Cool! I'm sure he was grateful for the free transportation
[VIDEO TAKEN: SEPTEMBER 4TH, 2025 | Video ID: A video of a black and orange braconid wasp on the white metal siding of a shed, a similarly darkly-colored pseudoscorpion attached to one of its back legs by a pincer. The pseudoscorpion hangs on tight to the wasp as the wasp tries to shoo it away, eventually flying off with it still attached /End ID.]
Here we see an Atanycolus genus wasp being pestered by an arachnid hitchhiker! Pseudoscorpions are known to do this to flying insects, notably Hymenoptera, for the sake of free travel!
Finally got pseudoscorpions! I've been looking for these guys for a long time! Truly an amazing arachnid order.
Marram Grass Chelifer (Dactylochelifer latreillii)
Observed by medgull, CC BY-NC
Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia: vol. 2 - Insects. Written by Dr. Bernhard Grzimek. 1984.
Internet Archive