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A man who found a bizarrely deep hole about the size of a coin in his garden was told it was home to a horrifying creature when he asked about online.<\/p>\n
The bloke wrote on Reddit saying that the hole was located in a dirt patch in the garden in Adelaide, Australia, but it was so deep that it was impossible to see what was inside.<\/p>\n
After sharing a picture of the hole, which he suspected could be made by a spider, people confirmed his worst nightmare. The man asked: "I'm in Adelaide Hills – can someone tell me what lives in here?"<\/p>\n
READ MORE: Fella makes pals with squirrel he nearly killed on 3,000-mile trip but faces cruel rule<\/b><\/p>\n
For more crazy animal stories, including one about a pooch with an extraordinarily long snout, click here.<\/i><\/b><\/p>\n
Most people agreed that the hole looked like the home of either a trapdoor spider, which constructs burrows in the ground with cork-like trapdoors made of soil, or a wolf spider, who are agile hunters that live on the ground in leaf litter or burrows.<\/p>\n
Both the homeowner and other commenters were unsure about about it being a spider hole given the lack of door, but the Australian Museum says this is common for both species.<\/p>\n
Taking to Reddit, one person said: "That is probably a burrow of a trapdoor spider. Most of them don't really build doors." Another person said: "There's thousands of these holes in the park across my house. I get a kick when I see people sunbathing or sitting on the grass, blissfully unaware of the horror sitting below them."<\/p>\n
A third commented: "We have them all through our lawn too, location Aldgate. I don\u2019t disturb them, as we have never seen the inhabitants and frankly, I'd prefer not to know as I'm afraid of spiders!"<\/p>\n
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However, others were convinced it was a wolf spider, with one person commenting: "Absolutely a lycosidae spider burrow (wolf spider). Unfortunately in a lot of places trap doors are on the decline, the vast majority of burrows you find (everywhere from in your lawn to in native bush land) will be wolf spider burrows."<\/p>\n
Trapdoor spiders live underground in borrows made by leaves or sticks to keep them hidden from predators. Their venom isn't considered dangerous to humans, but will cause mild pain and swelling. Trapdoor spiders inhabit tropical regions of the world, for example the US and Australia.<\/p>\n
Wolf spiders also live on the ground in leaf litter or burrows, and mostly feed off insects. Symptoms from a bite would usually be minor, for example localised pain or itchiness. Wolf spiders can live almost anywhere in the world, but are commonly found in Australia.<\/p>\n
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