Scorpion is the general name of arachnida and scorpion species in the arthropod phylum of the animal kingdom, and spiders also belong to arachnida.
Their typical features include slender bodies, claws, curved and segmented tails (hind abdomen) and thorns. The earliest scorpions on land appeared in the Silurian (Silurian) about 430 million years ago. Note: Any scorpion is poisonous, with different degrees of toxicity.
Living habits:
Scorpions are all carnivores, and very few species will take a small amount of plant feed (such as scorpions) and feed on invertebrates, such as spiders, crickets, centipedes, larvae and nymphs of various insects, and even small geckos.
It finds the location of its prey by hearing the hair on its limbs or tarsal joints and sewing up its receptors. Desert scorpions can identify cockroaches 50 cm deep. When the scorpion feeds, it grips the catch with its limbs, lifts its rear abdomen (scorpion tail), bends to the front of its body, and needles it with poison. It consists of six parts.