Centipede
From Free net encyclopedia
- For the Atari video game, see Centipede (video game). For other articles with the word centipede, go to Centipede (disambiguation).
{{Taxobox
| color = pink
| name = Centipedes
| image = Centipede.jpg
| image_width = 225px
| regnum = Animalia
| phylum = Arthropoda
| subphylum = Myriapoda
| classis = Chilopoda
| classis_authority = Latreille, 1817
| subdivision_ranks = Orders
| subdivision =
Geophilomorpha
Lithobiomorpha
Scolopendrida
Scutigerida
}}Centipedes (Class Chilopoda) are fast-moving venomous, predatory terrestrial arthropods that have long bodies and many jointed legs. Chiefly nocturnal, centipedes are found primarily in tropical climates. Like the closely-related millipedes, they are highly segmented (15 to 173 segments), but with one pair of walking legs per segment. Centipedes are dorso-ventrally flattened, and are among the fastest and most agile of arthropod predators.
Image:Centipede anterior.jpg The head of a centipede has a pair of antennae and jaw-like mandibles, and other mouthparts that evolved from modified appendages. The most anterior trunk segment of a centipede has a pair of venomous claws (called maxillipeds) that are used for both defense and for capturing and paralyzing prey. The venom can be dangerous to humans in some species. Despite their name, which stems from the Latin words 'centi' (meaning 'hundred') and 'ped' (meaning 'foot'), they normally have around half that, though it is possible to find centipedes with over 200 legs.
The house centipede (Scutigera coleoptrata) is a fast-moving carnivore that feeds on insects such as cockroaches and other small invertebrates.
Centipedes also live on cave floors underneath bats. When a baby bat falls from the cave ceiling, the centipedes swarm over and poison it before eating it.
In Japanese mythology, heroes battle with giant centipedes, which even at mundane sizes are often thought to be connected with the world of the dead.
List of some common centipede names
- Arizona desert centipede
- black centipede
- burrowing centipede
- Chinese red-headed centipede
- common centipede
- common desert centipede
- Egyptian centipede
- feather tail centipede
- garden centipede
- Galapagos Centipede
- giant desert centipede
- giant North American centipede
- giant peruvian centipede
- giant Sonoran centipede
- house centipede
- Megarian banded centipede
- orange footed centipede
- Peruvian giant orange leg centipede
- red feather tail centipede
- red-headed centipede
- stone centipede
- Sonoran desert centipede
- Tanzanian blue ringed centipede
- Mukade
References
- Neil A. Campbell, Biology: Fourth Edition, (Benjamin/Cummings Publishing, New York) 1996 page 614 ISBN 0-8053-1957-3
External links
- Tree of Life Project – Chilopoda
- What do you call a centipede?
- Pictures of many centipede species plus information
- Photos of Australian centipede (Scolopendra morsitans)
- Video of a centipede eating a mouseda:Skolopender
de:Hundertfüßer fr:Chilopoda io:Skolopendro he:נדלים nl:Duizendpoten ja:ムカデ no:Skolopendere pl:Stonoga pt:Quilópode ro:Centipede fi:Juoksujalkaiset
zh:蜈蚣