Cyriopagopus lividus
🔤 Taxonomy
Cyriopagopus lividus is the currently accepted scientific name. In older hobby material, the species was very widely encountered as Haplopelma lividum.
The latest rename that hobbyists most often encounter is:
- Haplopelma lividum -> Cyriopagopus lividus (current accepted placement)
English common names used in the hobby:
- Cobalt blue tarantula
German common names used in the hobby:
- Kobaltblaue Vogelspinne
📌 Description
Cyriopagopus lividus is a famous Old World Asian tarantula known for deep cobalt-blue legs and a strongly defensive fossorial lifestyle. It is not a handling species and spends much of its time inside the burrow.
Adult size is usually about 5-6 cm body length and about 12-14 cm legspan, with females typically heavier than mature males.
Its appeal is based on color, webbing, and burrow structure rather than on constant visibility.
☠️ Venom
Cyriopagopus lividus should be treated as a medically significant tarantula. A bite can cause intense local pain, swelling and, in some cases, wider symptoms such as muscle pain, cramping, nausea, dizziness or prolonged discomfort.
There is no species-specific antivenom used in routine pet-keeping practice. Do not handle this spider, do not force interactions, and plan enclosure work so that defensive contact is unlikely. Seek medical advice after any serious bite, allergic reaction, breathing difficulty, spreading symptoms, or bite involving a child or vulnerable person.
🌍 Distribution
Cyriopagopus lividus is native to mainland Southeast Asia, especially Myanmar and Thailand. In the wild it is associated with humid monsoon forest soils and deep self-made burrows.
For captive care, the useful lesson from this distribution is:
- a low terrestrial enclosure with deep, shape-holding substrate
- a secure hide and room to retreat below the surface
- moderate humidity with good ventilation, not stale wet substrate
- fresh water always available
- fall prevention and calm maintenance

⚖️ Legal status
As checked against current official sources in April 2026, no current CITES listing or specific EU wildlife trade Annex listing was found for Cyriopagopus lividus. The species is not relevant to the Bern Convention because it is not native to Europe.
Local rules on import, sale, transport, and proof of legal origin may still apply. Captive-bred animals are preferable.
🤌 Husbandry
This species should be kept alone in a secure fossorial setup. An adult is often kept in a terrestrial enclosure with substantial substrate depth rather than in a decorative arboreal setup.
Slings and juveniles should start in small, secure containers, often around 250 ml for small slings, then move through intermediate enclosures as they grow. Upgrade gradually so the spider can find prey easily and maintain stable conditions.
Useful basics include:
- Deep packed substrate
- A started burrow
- Good lid security
- Good ventilation
- Low disturbance
💡 Lighting
No special lighting is required beyond a normal room day-night cycle.
Bright lighting is usually unnecessary and may keep the spider hidden even more.
🌡 Heating and temperature
Suitable approximate temperatures are:
- Daytime: around 24-28°C
- Night: around 20-24°C
Moderate consistent warmth works better than overheating.
💧 Humidity and water
This species is usually kept with some retained moisture in part of the substrate and constant access to water.
Useful principles:
- Lower layers slightly moist
- Upper layers not swampy
- Water dish present
- Steady airflow
Constant saturation is dangerous, but completely dry substrate is also not ideal.
🌿 Enclosure and decoration
The enclosure should prioritize substrate depth and burrow security.
Useful elements include:
- Deep compact substrate
- Cork bark starter tunnel
- A water bowl
- Minimal stable decor
Height is much less important than a safe underground retreat.
🪳 Feeding
Cyriopagopus lividus is insectivorous.
Suitable foods include:
- Crickets
- Roaches
- Locusts where available
- Other suitable feeder insects of safe size
Slings are fed every 3-5 days; juveniles once or twice weekly. Adults usually do well every 7-14 days depending on prey size and body condition.
Prey is often taken from the burrow entrance. Uneaten prey should not be left to disturb a molting spider.
🩺 Common problems
Common problems include collapse of poor substrate, dehydration from neglected water access, overly wet stagnant setups, overheating, and escape risk during maintenance.
Warning signs include:
- Constant stress posture near the surface
- Wrinkled abdomen
- Weak movement
- Failed molt
- Visible collapse of the retreat area
This is a fast defensive species, so maintenance should stay controlled and minimal.
📌 Conclusion
Cyriopagopus lividus is a classic fossorial display tarantula for keepers who value color and burrow behavior more than visibility. Success depends on deep stable substrate, moderate humidity, fresh water, and careful low-disturbance maintenance.
📚 Sources and further reading
- CITES Appendices and Species+ trade database, checked April 2026
- EU wildlife trade regulations and annex references, checked April 2026
- GBIF species backbone and occurrence data for taxonomy and distribution context
- IUCN Red List and specialist husbandry references where applicable