Biology:Eumillipes

From HandWiki
Short description: Genus of millipede

Eumillipes
The leggiest animal on the planet, Eumillipes persephone, from Australia—female individual with 1,306 legs.jpg
A female with 330 body segments and 1,306 legs
Scientific classification edit
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Myriapoda
Class: Diplopoda
Order: Polyzoniida
Family: Siphonotidae
Genus: Eumillipes
Marek, 2021[1]
Species:
E. persephone
Binomial name
Eumillipes persephone
Marek, 2021[1]

Eumillipes is a genus of millipede in the family Siphonotidae. It contains a single species, E. persephone, known from the Eastern Goldfields of Western Australia. The species was first collected in 2021, discovered in three drill holes, living at depths of between 15 metres (50 ft) and 60 metres (200 ft).[1]

Etymology

Its generic name, Eumillipes, means "true millipede" (or "true thousand feet"), referring to its possession of over 1,000 legs; its specific name, persephone, alludes to the Greek goddess of the same name, who was the queen of the underworld, in reference to its subterranean lifestyle.[1][2][3]

Description

First described in 2021, individuals reach up to 95 mm (3.7 in) in length, and about 1 mm (0.039 in) in diameter with 198 to 330 body segments and up to 1,306 legs, making it the species with the most legs on Earth and the first millipede discovered to have 1,000 legs or more.[1][4]

It has a highly elongated body with a cone shaped head and unusually large, thick antennae. It is eyeless, a trait not found in any other Australian polyzoniidan.[1] Its elongated shape, large number of legs, and eyeless condition is convergent with the distantly related Illacme plenipes of North America, the previous record holder with up to 750 legs.[1][5][2] Their 700+ legs, their compressible unfused rings, extensible trunk, and flexible body is able to assist them in squeezing through its underground habitat, enabling it to crawl inside narrow crevices[6] In combination with the many legs, longitudinal and oblique muscles pull the rings together, facilitating forward locomotion.[6]

It varies from most members of Polyzoniida, with its elongated shape and thin body, as members of that order are usually shorter, with fewer legs and flatter dome-shaped bodies. Its inclusion in this order was based on analysis of its genome to determine a common ancestor.[4]

Its diet and lifestyle details are unknown, but it is thought that it may feed on fungi growing on the roots of trees.[4] Lua error in Module:Multiple_image at line 163: attempt to perform arithmetic on local 'totalwidth' (a nil value).

Discovery

E. Persephone were discovered under 60 meters of semiarid desert soil in a resource-rich region of Australia and are imminently threatened by surface mining.[6]

References

Wikidata ☰ {{{from}}} entry

de:Eumillipes persephone fr:Eumillipes persephone no:Eumillipes persephone pl:Eumillipes persephone pt:Eumillipes persephone ru:Eumillipes persephone