Aphonopelma chalcodes
🔤 Taxonomy
Aphonopelma chalcodes is the currently accepted scientific name. The 2016 revision of United States Aphonopelma synonymized several older names with this species, so old labels and field notes can be confusing.
Older names and combinations associated with this species include:
- Aphonopelma apacheum
- Aphonopelma minchi
- Aphonopelma rothi
- Aphonopelma schmidti
- Aphonopelma stahnkei
English common names used in the hobby:
- Arizona blonde tarantula
- Desert blonde tarantula
- Western desert tarantula
📌 Description
Aphonopelma chalcodes is a slow-growing terrestrial New World tarantula from the Sonoran Desert region. It is one of the calmer large tarantulas in the hobby, but its care still depends on low fall risk, patient feeding, dry surfaces, and clean water.
Adults usually reach about 12-15 cm legspan. Females can live for decades; mature males are much shorter lived and become more active after their final molt. The typical adult female has a pale blond to tan carapace with darker legs and abdomen, although locality and sex can affect the look.
This is a good first tarantula for a keeper who accepts two limits: it is not a handling animal, and it grows slowly. The main mistakes are wet stagnant substrate, tall enclosures, overfeeding heavy adults, and disturbing a closed burrow during long fasting periods.
Like other New World theraphosids, it can kick urticating hairs. Those hairs can irritate skin, eyes, and airways, so maintenance should be calm and hands-off even when the spider is usually placid.
🌍 Distribution
The World Spider Catalog lists Aphonopelma chalcodes from the United States. Husbandry and regional sources most often place it in arid parts of southern Arizona and nearby Sonoran Desert habitat, with some hobby references also discussing adjacent northern Mexico. The practical habitat signal is a burrow-using desert tarantula that avoids surface extremes by retreating underground.
In the terrarium, that means:
- a low terrestrial enclosure
- deep substrate that can hold a burrow shape
- mostly dry surface conditions
- a clean water dish
- one slightly more humid lower or corner zone
- stable room temperatures rather than harsh direct heat

⚖️ Legal status
As checked against current official CITES and EU wildlife-trade references on 2026-06-04, no current CITES listing or specific EU Annex listing was found for Aphonopelma chalcodes. The species is not relevant to the Bern Convention because it is not native to Europe.
This does not remove local rules. In the United States, state, park, landowner, transport, and collection rules may apply even when international trade listing is absent. Keep invoices, breeder details, and any import or transfer records. Avoid animals of unclear wild origin, especially adult females from local populations.
🤌 Husbandry
House Aphonopelma chalcodes alone. It is not a communal tarantula.
Spiderlings should start in small secure containers with enough substrate to dig and a small moisture zone. Very small slings can dehydrate faster than adult desert tarantulas, so do not keep the whole container bone dry.
Adults do well in a low terrestrial enclosure around 30 x 30 x 30 cm, adjusted to the animal. Give more substrate than empty climbing height. A heavy adult can suffer a serious abdomen injury from a short fall onto hard decor.
A dependable setup includes:
- 10-15 cm of compactable substrate
- a cork hide or starter burrow
- a shallow water dish
- good ventilation
- dry surface areas
- no high branches, tall rocks, or mesh that catches claws
Closed burrows and long fasts are normal for this species. Check water and body condition, then leave the spider undisturbed unless there is a clear welfare issue.
💡 Lighting
No UVB or specialist lighting is required. Normal room light and a regular day-night cycle are enough. Display lights must not heat the enclosure or dry the burrow entrance.
🌡 Heating and temperature
Aim for steady room temperatures around 20-25°C, with a mild night drop to about 16-21°C. Short normal household variation is usually tolerated better than constant overheating.
Avoid strong heat lamps or heat mats against the burrow. If extra warmth is needed, warm the room or shelf and measure near the hide entrance. A hot dry patch in a small enclosure is more dangerous than a slightly cool night.
💧 Humidity and water
Keep the surface mostly dry, roughly 35-55% in ordinary conditions, with a slightly more humid zone available below the surface or in one corner. Fresh water should always be present.
Do not chase high humidity because the species lives in desert habitat. Instead, offer choices: dry walking surface, clean water, and a deeper or corner area that stays a little buffered. Persistent dampness encourages mites, mold, and stress.
🌿 Enclosure and decoration
Use a simple low enclosure. Compact coco fiber, unfertilized soil, clay-soil mixes, or similar tarantula-safe substrate can work if the spider can dig without collapse.
Keep decor stable and low. Cork bark partly buried into the substrate is more useful than a tall display branch. Avoid mesh tops where claws can snag; if a mesh lid is already in use, cover or replace the risky interior surface.
🪳 Feeding
Feed roaches, crickets, locusts where legal, and occasional mealworms or superworms. Juveniles can feed more often; adults often do well with one suitable meal every 10-21 days, adjusted to abdomen size and season.
Do not feed by habit alone. A rounded abdomen is fine; an overfed adult is more vulnerable to fall injuries and molt problems. Remove uneaten prey, especially before or during molt and when the spider has sealed its burrow.
🩺 Common problems
Common problems include wet stagnant substrate, excessive enclosure height, dehydration in small slings, urticating hair exposure, overfeeding, and mistaking normal premolt or seasonal fasting for disease.
Do not dig up a closed burrow just because the spider skipped meals. Review water, temperature, body condition, and last molt timing. A shrinking abdomen, weak posture, injury, or failed molt needs immediate husbandry review and, when possible, help from an exotics veterinarian or experienced invertebrate keeper.
📌 Conclusion
Aphonopelma chalcodes suits keepers who want a calm, long-lived, dry-terrestrial display tarantula and can be patient with slow growth and long pauses in feeding. Success comes from deep substrate, water access, low fall risk, legal sourcing, and the discipline to leave a settled burrow alone.
📚 Sources and further reading
- World Spider Catalog: Aphonopelma chalcodes
- GBIF species entry for Aphonopelma chalcodes
- Hamilton, Hendrixson & Bond 2016 Aphonopelma revision
- Animal Diversity Web: Aphonopelma chalcodes
- The Tarantula Collective: Aphonopelma chalcodes care
- CITES Appendices — legal-status references checked 2026-06-04
- EU wildlife trade regulations — legal-status references checked 2026-06-04