Harpaphe haydeniana
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Harpaphe haydeniana | ||||||||||||||||
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Harpaphe haydeniana Wood, 1864 |
Harpaphe haydeniana (the yellow-spotted millipede, almond-scented millipede or cyanide millipede) is a millipede found in the moist forests along the Pacific coast of North America, from California to British Columbia and Alaska and South East Asia.
H. haydeniana reach a length of 4–5 centimetres when mature, and may live for 2–3 years. The body is black, and is distinctively marked along the sides with patches of a yellowish colour. H. haydeniana has approximately twenty body segments, bearing a total of 30 (males) or 31 (females) pairs of legs. The difference between males and females is due to one pair of legs on the seventh segment being modified in the male to form gonopods used for sperm transfer.
H. haydeniana is an important part of the forest ecosystem, breaking down leaf litter, and freeing up its nutrients for other organisms. Immature millipedes feed on humus.
H. haydeniana has few predators, due to its aposematic coloration and its ability to secrete hydrogen cyanide when threatened. This behaviour gives rise to the common names "cyanide millipede" and "almond-scented millipede" (since almonds smell of cyanide). Nonetheless, at least one species, the ground beetle Promecognathus laevissimus is a specialised predator of H. haydeniana.
[edit] External links
- Olympic National Park: almond-scented millipede
- Systematic compendium of arthropods and annelid worms from the Fort Collins Science Center