Scorpions (order Scorpiones) are predatory with eight legs, a pair of grasping pincers and a narrow, segmented tail, often carried in a characteristic forward curve over the back and always ending with a stinger. The evolutionary history of scorpions goes back Silurian. They mainly live in but have adapted to a wide range of environmental conditions, and can be found on all continents except Antarctica. There are over 2,500 described species, with 22 extant (living) families recognized to date. Their taxonomy is being revised to account for 21st-century genomic studies.
Scorpions primarily prey on and other , but some species hunt . They use their pincers to restrain and kill prey, or to prevent their own predation. The Scorpion sting is used for offense and defense. During courtship, the male and female grasp each other's pincers and dance while he tries to move her onto his sperm packet. All known species give viviparous and the female cares for the young as their harden, transporting them on her back. The exoskeleton contains fluorescent chemicals and glows under ultraviolet light.
The vast majority of species do not seriously threaten humans, and healthy adults usually do not need medical treatment after a sting. About 25 species (fewer than one percent) have venom capable of killing a human, which happens frequently in the parts of the world where they live, primarily where access to medical treatment is unlikely.
Scorpions appear in art, folklore, mythology, and commercial brands. are woven into kilim carpets for protection from their sting. Scorpius is the name of a constellation; the corresponding astrological sign is Scorpio. A classical myth about Scorpius tells how the giant scorpion and its enemy Orion became constellations on opposite sides of the sky.
Recent studies place as the sister group of scorpions in the clade Panscorpiones, which together with Tetrapulmonata makes up the clade Arachnopulmonata.
Cladogram of current understanding of chelicerate relationships, after Sharma and Gavish-Regev (2025):
The internal phylogeny of the scorpions has been debated, but genomic analysis consistently places the Bothriuridae as sister to a clade consisting of Scorpionoidea and Chactoidea. The scorpions diversified during the Devonian and into the early Carboniferous. The main division is into the clades Buthida and Iurida. The Bothriuridae diverged starting before temperate Gondwana broke up into separate land masses, completed by the Jurassic. The Iuroidea and Chactoidea are both seen not to be single clades, and are shown as "paraphyletic" (with quotation marks) in this 2018 cladogram.
More recently, some twenty-two families containing over 2,500 species of scorpions have been described, with many additions and much reorganization of taxa in the 21st century. There are over 100 described taxa of fossil scorpions. This classification is based on Soleglad and Fet (2003), which replaced Stockwell's older, unpublished classification. Further taxonomic changes are from papers by Soleglad et al. (2005).
The extant taxa to the taxonomic rank of family (numbers of species in parentheses) are:
Scorpions are usually , primarily living in , but they can be found in virtually every terrestrial habitat including high-elevation mountains, caves, and . They are largely absent from such as the tundra, high-altitude taiga, and mountain tops. The highest altitude reached by a scorpion is in the Andes, for Orobothriurus crassimanus. As regards , scorpions may be ground-dwelling, arboreal, rock-loving or psammophile. Some species, such as Vaejovis janssi, are versatile and use any habitat on Socorro Island, Baja California, while others such as Euscorpius carpathicus, endemic to the littoral zone of rivers in Romania, occupy specialized niches.
The pedipalp is a segmented, clawed appendage segmented into (from closest to the body outward) the coxa, trochanter, femur, patella, tibia (including the fixed claw and the manus) and tarsus (moveable claw). Unlike those of some other arachnids, the eight-segmented legs have not been altered for other purposes, though they may occasionally be used for digging, and females may use them to catch emerging young. They are covered with many , and sensory setae. Depending on the species, the legs may have spines and spurs.
The next four somites, 3 to 6, all possess two spiracles each. They serve as openings for the scorpion's respiratory organs, known as book lungs, and vary in shape. There are thus four pairs of book lungs; each consists of some 140 to 150 thin flaps or lamellae filled with air inside a pulmonary chamber, connected on the ventral side to an atrial chamber which opens into a spiracle. Bristles keep the lamellae from touching. A muscle opens the spiracle and widens the atrial chamber; dorsoventral muscles contract to constricts the pulmonary chamber, pushing air out, and relax to allow the chamber to refill. The 7th and last somite lacks any notable structure.
The mesosoma contains the heart or "dorsal vessel" which is the center of the scorpion's open circulatory system. The heart is continuous with a deep arterial system which spreads throughout the body. Sinuses return deoxygenated blood (hemolymph) to the heart; the blood is re-oxygenated by cardiac pores. The mesosoma also houses the reproductive system. The female are three or four tubes which are aligned and have two to four transverse anastomoses connecting them. These tubes create and house developing embryos. They connect to two which connect to a single atrium leading to the genital orifice. Males gonads are two pairs of cylindrical tubes with a ladder-like configuration; they contain spermatozoa-producing . Both tubes end in a spermiduct, one on the opposite sides of the mesosoma. They connect to glandular symmetrical structures called paraxial organs, which end at the genital orifice. These create two halves of the chitin-based spermatophore which merge.
The telson includes the vesicle, which contains a symmetrical pair of . Externally it bears the curved stinger, the hypodermic aculeus, equipped with sensory hairs. Venom ducts attached to the glands to transport the substance along the aculeus from the bulb of the gland to immediately near of the tip, where each of the paired ducts has its own venom pore. An intrinsic muscle system attached to the glands pumps venom through the stinger into the intended victim. The stinger contains with zinc, hardening the tip. The optimal angle to launch a sting is around 30 degrees relative to the tip.
Scorpions prefer areas where the temperature remains in the range of , but may survive temperatures from well below freezing to desert heat. Scorpions can withstand intense heat: Leiurus quinquestriatus, Scorpio maurus and Hadrurus arizonensis can live in temperatures of if they are sufficiently hydrated. Desert species must deal with the extreme changes in temperature from sunrise to sunset or between seasons; Pectinibuthus birulai lives in a temperature range of . Scorpions that live outside deserts prefer lower temperatures. The ability to withstand the cold may be related to the increase in the sugar trehalose when the temperature drops. Some species hibernate. Scorpions have immunity to ionizing radiation and have survived nuclear tests in Algeria and Nevada.
Desert scorpions have several adaptations for water conservation. They excrete insoluble compounds such as xanthine, guanine, and uric acid, not requiring water for their removal from the body. Guanine is the main component and maximizes the amount of nitrogen excreted. A scorpion's cuticle holds in moisture via and waxes from epidermal glands, and protects against ultraviolet radiation. Even when dehydrated, a scorpion can tolerate high osmotic pressure in its blood. Desert scorpions get most of their moisture from the food they eat but some can absorb water from the sand if it is humid enough. Species that live in denser vegetation and in more moderate temperatures will drink from puddles or water accumulated on plants.
A scorpion uses its stinger both for killing prey and defense. Some species make direct, quick strikes with their tails while others make slower, more circular strikes which can more easily return the stinger to a position where it can strike again. Leiurus quinquestriatus can whip its tail at a speed of up to in a defensive strike.
When threatened, a scorpion raises its claws and tail in a defensive posture. Some species stridulate to warn off predators by rubbing certain hairs, the stinger or the pectines. Certain species have a preference for using either the claws or stinger as defense, depending on the size of the appendages. A few scorpions, such as Parabuthus, Centruroides margaritatus, and Hadrurus arizonensis, squirt venom as which can injure predators in the eyes. Some Ananteris species can autotomy to escape predators. The parts do not grow back, leaving them unable to sting and defecate, but they can still kill small prey and reproduce for at least eight months afterward.
Scorpions, like other arachnids, digest their food externally. The chelicerae are used to rip small amounts of food off the prey item and into a pre-oral cavity underneath. The digestive juices from the gut are egested onto the food, and the digested food is then sucked into the gut. Any solid indigestible matter (such as exoskeleton fragments) is collected by in the pre-oral cavity and ejected. The sucked-in food is pumped into the midgut by the pharynx, where it is further digested. The waste is transported through the hindgut and out of the anus. Scorpions can eat large amounts of food during one meal. They can internally store food in a specialized organ and have a very low metabolic rate which enables some to survive up to a year without eating.
The pair then make contact using their pedipalps, and perform a dance called the promenade à deux (French for "a walk for two"). In this dance, the male and female move around while facing each other, as the male searches for a suitable place to deposit his spermatophore. The courtship ritual can involve several other behaviors such as a cheliceral kiss, in which the male and female grasp each other's mouth-parts, arbre droit ("upright tree") where the partners elevate their posteriors and rub their tails together, and sexual stinging, in which the male stings the female to subdue her. The dance may be minutes to hours long.
When the male has located a suitably stable surface, he deposits the spermatophore and guides the female over it. This allows the spermatophore to enter her genital opercula, which triggers release of the sperm, thus fertilizing the female. A mating plug then forms in the female to block further matings until she gives birth. The male and female then abruptly separate. Sexual cannibalism after mating has only been reported anecdotally in scorpions.
Before giving birth, the female raises the front of her body and positions her pedipalps and front legs under her for the young to fall through ("birth basket"). Each young exit through the genital opercula, expel the embryonic membrane, if any, and climb onto the mother's back where they remain until they have gone through at least one ecdysis. The period before the first molt is called the pro-juvenile stage; the young lack the ability to eat or sting, but have suckers on their tarsi. This period lasts 5 to 25 days, depending on the species. The brood molt for the first time simultaneously in a process that lasts 6 to 8 hours, marking the beginning of the juvenile stage.
Juvenile stages or generally resemble smaller versions of adults, with pincers, hairs and stingers. They are still soft and colorless, and thus continue to ride on their mother's back for protection. As days pass, they become harder and more pigmented. They may leave their mother temporarily, returning when they sense potential danger. When fully hardened, young can hunt and kill on their own and eventually become fully independent. A scorpion goes through an average of six molts before maturing, which may not occur until it is 6 to 83 months old, depending on the species. They can reach an age of 25 years.
Scorpion stings are a public health problem, particularly in the tropical and subtropical regions of the Americas, North Africa, the Middle East and India. Around 1.5 million scorpion envenomations occur each year, with around 2,600 deaths. Mexico is one of the most affected countries, with the highest biodiversity of scorpions in the world, some 200,000 envenomations per year and at least 300 deaths.
Efforts are made to prevent envenomation and to control scorpion populations. Prevention encompasses personal activities such as checking shoes and clothes before putting them on, not walking in bare feet or sandals, and filling in holes and cracks where scorpions might nest. Street lighting reduces scorpion activity. Control may involve the use of such as pyrethroids, or gathering scorpions manually with the help of ultraviolet lights. Domestic predators of scorpions, such as chickens and turkeys, can help to reduce the risk to a household.
The scorpion is a culturally significant animal. One of the earliest occurrences of the scorpion in culture is its inclusion, as Scorpio, in the 12 signs of the Zodiac by Babylonian astronomers during the Neo-Babylonian.
In ancient Egypt, the goddess Serket, who protected the Pharaoh, was often depicted as a scorpion. In Greek mythology, Artemis or Gaia sent a giant scorpion named Scorpius to kill the hunter Orion, who had said he would kill all the world's animals. Orion and the scorpion both became constellations; as enemies they were placed on opposite sides of the world, so when one rises in the sky, the other sets.
Scorpions are mentioned in the Bible and the Talmud as symbols of danger and maliciousness. The Sanskrit medical encyclopedia, The Sushruta Samhita, datable to before 500 CE, contains a detailed description of thirty types of scorpion, classified according to the levels of toxicity of their stings and their colours. Treatments for scorpion-sting are described. Scorpions have also appeared as a motif in art, especially in Islamic art in the Middle East.
A scorpion motif is often woven into Turkish kilim flatweave carpets, for protection from their sting. The scorpion is perceived both as an embodiment of evil and as a protective force such as a dervish's powers to combat evil. In Muslim folklore, the scorpion portrays human sexuality. Scorpions are used in folk medicine in South Asia, especially in for scorpion stings.
The Animal tale of The Scorpion and the Frog has been interpreted as showing that vicious people cannot resist hurting others, even when it is not in their interests. More recently, the action in John Steinbeck's 1947 novella The Pearl centers on a poor pearl fisherman's attempts to save his infant son from a scorpion sting, only to lose him to human violence. Scorpions have equally appeared in western artforms including film and poetry: the surrealist filmmaker Luis Buñuel made symbolic use of scorpions in his 1930 classic L'Age d'or ( The Golden Age). A hand- or forearm-balancing asana in modern yoga as exercise with the back arched and one or both legs pointing forward over the head in the manner of the scorpion's tail is called Scorpion pose.
Geographical distribution
Morphology
Cephalothorax
Mesosoma
Metasoma
Biology
Mortality and defense
Diet and feeding
Mating
Birth and development
Fluorescence
Relationship with humans
Stings
Potential medical use
Consumption
Pets
Culture
Notes
Further reading
External links
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