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  2. Arizona bark scorpion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arizona_bark_scorpion

    Arizona bark scorpions are eaten by a wide variety of animals such as pallid bats, [2] birds (especially owls), reptiles, and other vertebrates. Some examples include spiders, snakes, peccaries, rodents, and other scorpions. Development, pesticides and collecting scorpions for research or the pet trade also reduces the bark scorpion population.

  3. Centruroides exilicauda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centruroides_exilicauda

    The Baja California bark scorpion is a scorpion that belongs to the Centruroides genus and exilicauda species and is one of the 529 species of scorpions around today and one of the 41 bark species of scorpions. [4] [5] They are native to the Western parts of North America, including Baja California, California, Arizona, and New Mexico.

  4. Centruroides gracilis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centruroides_gracilis

    Centruroides gracilis is a species of scorpion in the family Buthidae, the bark scorpions. Its common names include Florida bark scorpion, brown bark scorpion, and slender brown scorpion. [1] [2] In Cuba it is known as alacran prieto ("dusky scorpion") and alacran azul ("blue scorpion"). [1]

  5. Centruroides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centruroides

    Centruroides is a genus of scorpions of the family Buthidae. Several North American species are known by the common vernacular name bark scorpion . Numerous species are extensively found throughout the southern United States , Mexico , Central America , the Antilles and northern South America . [ 1 ]

  6. Lychas marmoreus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lychas_marmoreus

    Lychas marmoreus, also known as the marbled scorpion, little marbled scorpion or bark scorpion, is a species of small scorpion in the Buthidae family. It is native to Australia , and was first described in 1845 by German arachnologist Carl Ludwig Koch .

  7. Striped bark scorpion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Striped_bark_scorpion

    A striped scorpion hiding among rocks at Taum Sauk Mountain State Park. A medium-sized scorpion that is rarely longer than 70 mm (up to around 2 3/4 in), the striped bark scorpion is a uniform pale-yellow scorpion that can be identified by two dark, longitudinal stripes on its carapace, with a dark triangle above the ocular tubercle.

  8. Mark and Graham's new pet collection, fittingly named Bark and Graham, leans into the same cheerful and timeless style that you've come to know and love the brand but in the form of furry-friend ...

  9. Centruroides hentzi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centruroides_hentzi

    Centruroides hentzi, the Hentz striped scorpion, is a species of bark scorpion in the family Buthidae. They are native to the southeastern United States including the states of Florida , southwestern Alabama , and in the coastal plain of Southern Georgia including surrounding barrier islands. [ 1 ]