The 49-year-old immediately knew one thing was unsuitable and rushed to examine on her and his three-year-old son Blake.
“She has a thing about spiders, and sure enough when I got there she said, ‘There is a big one.’
“I assumed it might simply be a huntsman, however I appeared down and there was this nice large factor on the bottom flat.
“I could see what it was straight away.”
Copeland assured his daughter all the pieces could be okay and safely caught the arachnid, which was round 5 to 6 centimetres in size.
“It was a pretty full-on spider,” he stated, including it was a male who was probably on the lookout for a feminine to mate with.
“It was pretty chilled out though.
“It wasn’t aggressive and did not get right into a threatening posture.
“(But) it is of course a highly venomous spider and serves as a reminder to be vigilant as to what might be crawling around your house and kids.”
The animal lover relocated the spider into bushland – however not earlier than snapping a couple of pictures for formal identification.
The spider has since been recognized as Hadronyche macquariensis, or Port Macquarie funnel-web spider, which is one among a variety of species of Australian funnel-webs.
Its cousin, the Sydney funnel-web, is Australia’s most harmful spider.
The park additionally urged “responsible adults” to catch wandering Sydney funnel-webs safely, as donations are essential to the life-saving antivenom program.
According to the Australian Museum, as much as 30 to 40 persons are bitten every year by Sydney funnel-webs, with 13 deaths recorded from males of the species.
However, there has not been a single demise because the introduction of the antivenom program within the early Eighties.
As for Lucy, she continues to be recovering from her shut name.
“She was spooked because I made the mistake of showing it to her after I caught it,” Copeland stated.
“(But) I had to give them the lesson not to get too close to the animal.”