Spiders have transparent blood.
Spiders Have Transparent Blood (Sometimes Blue)
If you've ever wondered what happens when you accidentally squish a spider, you might be surprised to learn there's no red splatter. That's because spiders don't have blood like we do - they have something called hemolymph, and it's either transparent or a ghostly pale blue.
The Copper Connection
The reason for this eerie colorlessness comes down to chemistry. Human blood gets its signature red color from hemoglobin, an iron-based protein that carries oxygen through our bodies. Spiders, on the other hand, use hemocyanin - a copper-based protein that does the same job.
When hemocyanin binds to oxygen, it turns a faint blue color. When it's deoxygenated, it becomes nearly colorless. This means a spider's blood color literally changes depending on whether it's carrying oxygen or not.
Why Copper Instead of Iron?
Hemocyanin actually has some advantages over hemoglobin. It works better in cold environments and low-oxygen conditions - perfect for creatures that might spend time lurking in dark, poorly ventilated spaces. The copper-based system is also more efficient at releasing oxygen to tissues in certain conditions.
But there's a trade-off: hemocyanin doesn't bind to oxygen as tightly as hemoglobin does. This is why spiders have an open circulatory system where hemolymph freely bathes their internal organs, rather than being confined to blood vessels like ours.
Other Blue-Blooded Creatures
Spiders aren't alone in this quirk. Other arthropods and mollusks also use hemocyanin:
- Horseshoe crabs (their blue blood is used to test vaccines for contamination)
- Octopuses and squids
- Scorpions and many crustaceans
- Some snails
So next time you see a spider scuttling across your ceiling, remember: beneath that hairy exterior flows blood as clear as water - or perhaps tinged with the faintest hint of aristocratic blue.