Millipede
Millipedes are a group of arthropods that are characterised by having two pairs of jointed legs on most body segments; they are known scientifically as the class Diplopoda, the name derived from this feature. Each double-legged segment is a result of two single segments fused together. Most millipedes have very elongated cylindrical or flattened bodies with more than 20 segments, while pill millipedes are shorter and can roll into a tight ball. Although the name "millipede" derives from Latin for "thousand feet", no species was known to have 1,000 or more until the discovery in 2020 of Eumillipes persephone, which can have over 1,300 legs. There are approximately 12,000 named species classified into 16 orders and around 140 families, making Diplopoda the largest class of myriapods, an arthropod subphylum which also includes centipedes and other multi-legged creatures.
Most millipedes are slow-moving detritivores, eating decaying leaves and other dead plant matter; however, some eat fungi or drink plant fluid. Millipedes are generally harmless to humans, although some can become household or garden pests. Millipedes can be an unwanted nuisance particularly in greenhouses where they can potentially cause severe damage to emergent seedlings. Most millipedes defend themselves with a variety of chemicals secreted from pores along the body, although the tiny bristle millipedes are covered with tufts of detachable bristles. Its primary defence mechanism is to curl into a tight coil, thereby protecting its legs and other vital delicate areas on the body behind a hard exoskeleton. Reproduction in most species is carried out by modified male legs called gonopods, which transfer packets of sperm to females.
First appearing in the Silurian period, millipedes are some of the oldest known land animals. Some members of prehistoric groups, such as Arthropleura, grew to over ; the largest modern species reach maximum lengths of. The longest extant species is the giant African millipede.
Among myriapods, millipedes have traditionally been considered most closely related to the tiny pauropods, although some molecular studies challenge this relationship. Millipedes can be distinguished from the somewhat similar but only distantly related centipedes, which move rapidly, are venomous, carnivorous, and have only a single pair of legs on each body segment.
The scientific study of millipedes is known as diplopodology, and a scientist who studies them is called a diplopodologist.
Etymology and names
The term "millipede" is widespread in popular and scientific literature, but among North American scientists, the term "milliped" is also used. Other vernacular names include "thousand-legger" or simply "diplopod". The study of millipede biology and taxonomy is called diplopodology.Classification
Approximately 12,000 millipede species have been described. Estimates of the true number of species on earth range from 15,000 to as high as 80,000. Few species of millipede are at all widespread; they have very poor dispersal abilities, depending as they do on terrestrial locomotion and humid habitats. These factors have favoured genetic isolation and rapid speciation, producing many lineages with restricted ranges.The living members of the Diplopoda are divided into sixteen orders in two subclasses. The basal subclass Penicillata contains a single order, Polyxenida. All other millipedes belong to the subclass Chilognatha consisting of two infraclasses: Pentazonia, containing the short-bodied pill millipedes, and Helminthomorpha, containing the great majority of the species.
Outline of classification
The higher-level classification of millipedes is presented below, based on Shear, 2011, and Shear & Edgecombe, 2010. Recent cladistic and molecular studies have challenged the traditional classification schemes above, and in particular the position of the orders Siphoniulida and Polyzoniida is not yet well established. The placement and positions of extinct groups known only from fossils is tentative and not fully resolved. After each name is listed the author citation: the name of the person who coined the name or defined the group, even if not at the current rank.Class Diplopoda de Blainville in Gervais, 1844
- Subclass Penicillata Latreille, 1831
- * Order Polyxenida Verhoeff, 1934
- Subclass †Arthropleuridea
- *Order †Arthropleurida Waterlot, 1934
- * Order †Eoarthropleurida Shear & Selden, 1995
- * Order †Microdecemplicida Wilson & Shear, 2000
- Subclass Chilognatha Latreille, 1802
- * Order †Zosterogrammida Wilson, 2005
- * Infraclass Pentazonia Brandt, 1833
- ** Order †Amynilyspedida Hoffman, 1969
- ** Superorder Limacomorpha Pocock, 1894
- *** Order Glomeridesmida Cook, 1895
- ** Superorder Oniscomorpha Pocock, 1887
- *** Order Glomerida Brandt, 1833
- *** Order Sphaerotheriida Brandt, 1833
- * Infraclass Helminthomorpha Pocock, 1887
- ** Superorder †Archipolypoda Scudder, 1882
- *** Order †Archidesmida Wilson & Anderson 2004
- *** Order †Cowiedesmida Wilson & Anderson 2004
- *** Order †Euphoberiida Hoffman, 1969
- *** Order †Palaeosomatida Hannibal & Krzeminski, 2005
- ** Order †Pleurojulida Schneider & Werneburg, 1998
- ** Subterclass Colobognatha Brandt, 1834
- *** Order Platydesmida Cook, 1895
- *** Order Polyzoniida Cook, 1895
- *** Order Siphonocryptida Cook, 1895
- *** Order Siphonophorida Newport, 1844
- ** Subterclass Eugnatha Attems, 1898
- *** Superorder Juliformia Attems, 1926
- **** Order Julida Brandt, 1833
- **** Order Spirobolida Cook, 1895
- **** Order Spirostreptida Brandt, 1833
- ****Superfamily †Xyloiuloidea Cook, 1895
- *** Superorder Nematophora Verhoeff, 1913
- **** Order Callipodida Pocock, 1894
- **** Order Chordeumatida Pocock 1894
- **** Order Stemmiulida Cook, 1895
- **** Order Siphoniulida Cook, 1895
- *** Superorder Merocheta Cook, 1895
- **** Order Polydesmida Pocock, 1887
Evolution
Living groups
The history of scientific millipede classification began with Carl Linnaeus, who in his 10th edition of Systema Naturae, 1758, named seven species of Julus as "Insecta Aptera". In 1802, the French zoologist Pierre André Latreille proposed the name Chilognatha as the first group of what are now the Diplopoda, and in 1840 the German naturalist Johann Friedrich von Brandt produced the first detailed classification. The name Diplopoda itself was coined in 1844 by the French zoologist Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville. From 1890 to 1940, millipede taxonomy was driven by relatively few researchers at any given time, with major contributions by Carl Attems, Karl Wilhelm Verhoeff and Ralph Vary Chamberlin, who each described over 1,000 species, as well as Orator F. Cook, Filippo Silvestri, R. I. Pocock, and Henry W. Brölemann. This was a period when the science of diplopodology flourished: rates of species descriptions were on average the highest in history, sometimes exceeding 300 per year.In 1971, the Dutch biologist C. A. W. Jeekel published a comprehensive listing of all known millipede genera and families described between 1758 and 1957 in his Nomenclator Generum et Familiarum Diplopodorum, a work credited as launching the "modern era" of millipede taxonomy. In 1980, the American biologist Richard L. Hoffman published a classification of millipedes which recognized the Penicillata, Pentazonia, and Helminthomorpha, and the first phylogenetic analysis of millipede orders using modern cladistic methods was published in 1984 by Henrik Enghoff of Denmark. A 2003 classification by the American myriapodologist Rowland Shelley is similar to the one originally proposed by Verhoeff, and remains the currently accepted classification scheme, despite more recent molecular studies proposing conflicting relationships. A 2011 summary of millipede family diversity by William A. Shear placed the order Siphoniulida within the larger group Nematophora.