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A whip-scorpion

A whip-scorpion.jpg  Normal position of the larvæ of Culex and Anopheles in the waterThumbnailsAnopheles quadrimaculatus mosquito Normal position of the larvæ of Culex and Anopheles in the waterThumbnailsAnopheles quadrimaculatus mosquito Normal position of the larvæ of Culex and Anopheles in the waterThumbnailsAnopheles quadrimaculatus mosquito Normal position of the larvæ of Culex and Anopheles in the waterThumbnailsAnopheles quadrimaculatus mosquito Normal position of the larvæ of Culex and Anopheles in the waterThumbnailsAnopheles quadrimaculatus mosquito Normal position of the larvæ of Culex and Anopheles in the waterThumbnailsAnopheles quadrimaculatus mosquito Normal position of the larvæ of Culex and Anopheles in the waterThumbnailsAnopheles quadrimaculatus mosquito

The tailed whip-scorpions, belonging to the family Thelyphonidæ, are represented in the United States by the giant whip-scorpion Mastigoproctus giganteus, which is common in Florida, Texas and some other parts of the South. In Florida, it is locally known as the "grampus" or "mule-killer" and is very greatly feared. There is no evidence that these fears have any foundation, and Dr. Marx states that there is neither a poison gland nor a pore in the claw of the chelicera.