Assessor: Robin Lyle
The blue footed baboon spider, Idiothele mira, appear in the international exotic pet trade with some regularity (see websites listed below for examples).
http://k8inverts.com/product/idiothele-mira-south-african-blue-foot-baboon-1/
https://undergroundreptiles.com/shop/blue-foot-baboon-tarantula/
https://fearnottarantulas.com/product/idiothele-mira-blue-foot-baboon/
No data is available on current rates of exploitation. However, some notes have been made available on the internet on how to breed them in captivity (see websites listed below for examples).
https://www.theraphosidae.be/en/idiothele-mira/
http://arachnoboards.com/threads/idiothele-mira.258100/
http://arachnoboards.com/threads/what-idiothele-mira-care-experiences.242840/
Current accessible (via the internet) distribution of this species is known from the original species description (Gallon, 2010). However, the geographic range is larger than what was previously known, but still quite small due to restricted records available on ADU SpiderMap (I. Engelbrecht, pers.comm.).
Gallon, R.C. 2010. On some southern African Harpactirinae, with notes on the eumenophorines Pelinobius muticus Karsch, 1885 and Monocentropella Strand, 1907 (Araneae, Theraphosidae). Bulletin of the British Arachnological Society 15: 29-48.
Mygalomorphs, in which the family Theraphosidae belongs, are exceptionally long lived for spiders with some living beyond 20 years (Dippenaar-Schoeman, 2002). This species is a long living and dispersal-limited endemic that is currently protected within a national park.
Dippenaar-Schoeman, A.S. 2002. Baboon and Trapdoor Spiders of Southern Africa: An Identification Manual, Handbook N. ed. Plant Production Research Institute. Agricultural Research Council, Pretoria, Pretoria.