
Brazilian Blue Tarantula (Lasiocyano sazimai) - 1/4 in
Tarantula

Spider
Vantablack Wolf Spider for sale from Big Z's (Lycosa singoriensis). Spice-rated keeper notes, care guidance, and live-arrival packing where eligible.
A jet-black burrowing heavyweight from the Asian steppe
Lycosa singoriensis, sold in the trade as the Vantablack Wolf Spider, is one of the largest wolf spiders you can keep: a deep, glossy black burrower from Central Asia with a body pushing 1.5 inches and a leg span that can reach 3-4 inches. It digs a real burrow and defends it.
Bigger and bolder than a native Hogna, but still not medically significant; treat it with the same hands-off respect you'd give a large tarantula. Note: "Vantablack Wolf Spider" is a trade name rather than a confirmed scientific ID, so double-check this against your shipment when it arrives. The care guide has the build and the boundaries.
The numbers live in the care guide. Enclosure size, temps, humidity, feeding schedule, premolt signs, handling boundaries: it's all in the care guide for this exact fella. Start with the full Advanced guide, or click for the quick Open the Simple version →
Lycosa singoriensis - Spice 3 โ Intermediate. Burrow Buddy for juveniles; larger deep-substrate terrestrial setup for adults
Lycosa singoriensis
Big Z's Quick Verdict: A large, jet-black burrowing wolf spider from Central Asia with a bulky, tarantula-like build. Bigger and bolder than the native wolf spiders. Still not medically significant, but best treated as hands-off.
| Temp | 70โ82ยฐF |
|---|---|
| Humidity | Low (30-60%) |
| Setup | Deep-burrowing large wolf spider |
| Substrate | Deep dry sand/soil mix (4โ6 in) for burrowing |
| Feeding | 1/2-3/4" roaches/crickets (no larger than body length); juveniles 2x/week, adults weekly, offered at dusk |
| Handling | Not recommended |
Humidity zones: Very Low under 30% - Low 30-60% - Low-Moderate 40-70% - Moderate 60-80% - Moderate-High 70-85% - High 80%+ - Very High 90%+
Current Big Z's catalog: Yes
Lycosa singoriensis
Keeper Snapshot: A large, jet-black burrowing wolf spider from Central Asia with a bulky, tarantula-like build. Bigger and bolder than the native wolf spiders. Still not medically significant, but best treated as hands-off.
| Temperature | 70โ82ยฐF |
|---|---|
| Humidity | Low (30-60%) |
| Setup Type | Deep-burrowing large wolf spider |
| Substrate | Deep dry sand/soil mix (4โ6 in) for burrowing |
| Feeding | 1/2-3/4" roaches/crickets (no larger than body length); juveniles 2x/week, adults weekly, offered at dusk |
| Care Difficulty | Spice 3 โ Intermediate |
| Handling | Not recommended |
Humidity zones: Very Low under 30% - Low 30-60% - Low-Moderate 40-70% - Moderate 60-80% - Moderate-High 70-85% - High 80%+ - Very High 90%+
Vantablack Wolf Spider for sale from Big Z's (Lycosa singoriensis). Spice-rated keeper notes, care guidance, and live-arrival packing where eligible.
A jet-black burrowing heavyweight from the Asian steppe
Lycosa singoriensis, sold in the trade as the Vantablack Wolf Spider, is one of the largest wolf spiders you can keep: a deep, glossy black burrower from Central Asia with a body pushing 1.5 inches and a leg span that can reach 3-4 inches. It digs a real burrow and defends it.
Bigger and bolder than a native Hogna, but still not medically significant; treat it with the same hands-off respect you'd give a large tarantula. Note: "Vantablack Wolf Spider" is a trade name rather than a confirmed scientific ID, so double-check this against your shipment when it arrives. The care guide has the build and the boundaries.
The numbers live in the care guide. Enclosure size, temps, humidity, feeding schedule, premolt signs, handling boundaries: it's all in the care guide for this exact fella. Start with the full Advanced guide, or click for the quick Open the Simple version →
Lycosa singoriensis - Spice 3 โ Intermediate. Burrow Buddy for juveniles; larger deep-substrate terrestrial setup for adults
Lycosa singoriensis
Big Z's Quick Verdict: A large, jet-black burrowing wolf spider from Central Asia with a bulky, tarantula-like build. Bigger and bolder than the native wolf spiders. Still not medically significant, but best treated as hands-off.
| Temp | 70โ82ยฐF |
|---|---|
| Humidity | Low (30-60%) |
| Setup | Deep-burrowing large wolf spider |
| Substrate | Deep dry sand/soil mix (4โ6 in) for burrowing |
| Feeding | 1/2-3/4" roaches/crickets (no larger than body length); juveniles 2x/week, adults weekly, offered at dusk |
| Handling | Not recommended |
Humidity zones: Very Low under 30% - Low 30-60% - Low-Moderate 40-70% - Moderate 60-80% - Moderate-High 70-85% - High 80%+ - Very High 90%+
Current Big Z's catalog: Yes
Lycosa singoriensis
Keeper Snapshot: A large, jet-black burrowing wolf spider from Central Asia with a bulky, tarantula-like build. Bigger and bolder than the native wolf spiders. Still not medically significant, but best treated as hands-off.
| Temperature | 70โ82ยฐF |
|---|---|
| Humidity | Low (30-60%) |
| Setup Type | Deep-burrowing large wolf spider |
| Substrate | Deep dry sand/soil mix (4โ6 in) for burrowing |
| Feeding | 1/2-3/4" roaches/crickets (no larger than body length); juveniles 2x/week, adults weekly, offered at dusk |
| Care Difficulty | Spice 3 โ Intermediate |
| Handling | Not recommended |
Humidity zones: Very Low under 30% - Low 30-60% - Low-Moderate 40-70% - Moderate 60-80% - Moderate-High 70-85% - High 80%+ - Very High 90%+

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