Harvestmen

Close up of “daddy longlegs” Phalangium opilio (photo by Mehran Moghtadai on Wikimedia Commons)

28 November 2011

Last weekend in southern Virginia I saw a troop of six daddy longlegs exploring the edge of a hiking trail. What were they doing?

I searched the Internet for information and though I didn’t find that answer I learned some fascinating things — and their real name.

I call them daddy longlegs but their real name is harvestmen. They’re very ancient and diverse bugs with more than 6,400 species on earth that date back to the Devonian era 400 million years ago.  Compared to humans who reached our present form 200,000 years ago, this bug goes way back!

Harvestmen are arachnids but they’re not spiders (Araneae), they’re Opiliones.

Unlike spiders their bodies look like a single oval because the segments are joined broadly.  They can’t make silk, they have no venom, no fangs and are completely harmless to people.

Harvestmen can eat solid food (spiders have to liquefy their food and suck it in) and they’re omnivorous, willing to ambush prey or scavenge the dead.  They’ll even eat bird dung.

The bird connection works both ways.  Birds eat daddy longlegs but the longlegs have a decoy system.  A harvestman can lose a leg and it’ll continue to twitch because of  a “pacemaker” at the end of the first segment (the pacemaker is useful in controlling such a long leg).  The twitching distracts the predator while the other seven legs carry the bug to safety.  At least one of the bugs I watched last weekend was missing a leg.

And what were so many of them doing together?  Apparently some species of harvestmen are gregarious and will congregate in groups of 200 to 70,000 individuals.

Maybe the six of them were having a small party.

(photo of Phalangium opilio by Mehran Moghtadai from Wikimedia Commons.  Click on the photo to see the original.)

p.s. In this blog I’m using the word “bug” loosely.  True bugs are insects (six legs) with a chitinous (hardened) wing cover. Harvestmen are not really bugs; stink bugs are.

6 thoughts on “Harvestmen

  1. In my hiking, I’ve found Autumn to be a great time to find Harvestmen. Not only can they be found in abundance, but they can be found in a wide range of color patterns. However, even for all my sightings over the years, it was only last year when I first observed the congregational tendency…and quite by accident. I was looking at a series of tree leaves, trying to determine what type of growth was causing very thin, bent branch-like extensions to completely consume the foliage when I realized I was looking at hundreds and hundreds of legs. They spanned all over a series of branches from eye-level upwards and didn’t seem very concerned about my nose inadvertently invading their privacy.

  2. Here in the deep south, we see “clumps” of these long legged fellows all the time. They love to get up on the underside of the eaves, on the soffitt (sp?) and if they are disturbed, it seems like hundreds of them take off. We’ve always wondered why they pile up together like that – mating? partying? committee meetings? Who knows? Bottom line: since they eat other, possibly less benign bugs, we welcome them. Anything that eats a mosquito is a friend of mine!

  3. I’ve seen golf ball to basketball clumps of them wintering in Barton Cave. The entire ball quivers to generate heat. Barton is in the Forbes State Forest just “down the holler” from Laurel Caverns.

  4. It seems like stink bugs and harvestmen are related to me because they give off the same odor when distressed.

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