Finally, a Millipede That Actually Has 1,000 Legs (2024)

Finally, a Millipede That Actually Has 1,000 Legs (1)

The word "millipede" means "a thousand feet,” but the name is a bit of an exaggeration. Until recently, scientists had only found a millipede with around 750 legs. With the discovery of a new species in Australia, scientists have finally assigned the millipede name to an insect worthy of the title: MeetEumillipes persephone, acritter with a whooping 1,306 legs—the most of any known animal.

E. persephone stretches around three-and-a-half inches long and around a millimeter wide. The pale bug has a cone-shaped head, beaked mouth, and large antennae used for sensing its environment, Charles Q. Choi reports for Inside Science.The findings were published last weekin Scientific Reports.

"In my opinion, this is a stunning animal, a marvel of evolution," study co-author Bruno Buzatto, abiologist at Bennelongia Environmental Consultants in Perth, Australia, tells Reuter’s Will Dunham. “This species, in particular, managed to adapt to living tens of meters deep in the soil, in an arid and harsh landscape where it is very hard to find any millipedes surviving in the surface.”

Buzatto, who was hired as an environmental consultant by mining companies, found E. persephone while surveying the area for local wildlife in August 2020. Buzatto baited traps with damp leaf litter, dropped them down 200 feet into boreholes, and later reeled up eight pale millipedes, reportsElizabeth Preston for the New York Times. He then sent the millipedes to Virginia Tech entomologist Paul Marek, who studies the previous record-holding millipedes found in California. After they looked at the critters under the microscopes and sequencedtheir DNA, they knew they had the first “true” millepede.

“It was mind-boggling because it’s almost double the previous number of legs in millipedes,” Marek tellsthe Times. “Seven hundred and fifty seems like a lot of legs for an animal. One thousand, three hundred and six is pretty astounding.”

Buzatto and Marek also noted that the female millipedes they collected averaged more legs than males. Thetwo adult males described in the study had 778 and 818legs, while the two adult femaleshad 998 and 1,306 legs. As millipedes grow and molt their exoskeletons, they can add additional legs. The researchers think all those extra appendages might be a boon to the critters, who need to scuttle through tight underground spaces.

"We believe that the large number of legs provides an advantage in terms of traction/force to push their bodies forward through small gaps and fractures in the soil where they live," says Buzatto.

The researchers conclude that the ancestors of E. persephone may have originated above groundhundreds of millions of years ago before fleeing underground when conditions became hotter and drier. Because the team was able to examine only a handful ofspecimens, they’re eager to see if other, even-leggier millipedes exist.

“There could be one with more legs out there,” Marek says to the Times.

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Finally, a Millipede That Actually Has 1,000 Legs (2)

Corryn Wetzel | | READ MORE

Corryn Wetzel is a freelance science journalist based in Brooklyn. Her work has also appeared in Audubon magazine, National Geographic and others.

Finally, a Millipede That Actually Has 1,000 Legs (2024)
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