Pleuroloma flavipes

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Pleuroloma flavipes
The wandering cherry millipede, Pleuroloma flavipes Rafinesque, 1820.jpg
Male (top) and female (bottom) wandering cherry millipedes, Pleuroloma flavipes
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Myriapoda
Class: Diplopoda
Order: Polydesmida
Family: Xystodesmidae
Genus: Pleuroloma
Species:
P. flavipes
Binomial name
Pleuroloma flavipes
Rafinesque, 1820

Pleuroloma flavipes, commonly known as the traveling cherry millipede, [1] is a species of flat-backed millipede in the family Xystodesmidae. [2] It has the widest distribution of any species of xystodesmid millipede and is found in eastern North America from southeastern North Dakota, eastward to Connecticut, and southward to North Carolina, northern Louisiana, and southern Texas. [3] Pleuroloma flavipes millipedes are occasionally observed in large aggregations of individuals where they appear to move en masse in a certain direction, hence the common name "wandering cherry millipede". [4] In a report from 1950, an aggregation of about 6,000 individuals were encountered on a single bridge at McCormick's Creek State Park, Indiana. [5] The species is extremely variable in coloration, and converges in appearance with several species of Apheloria and Brachoria as a result of mimicry. [6]

Pleuroloma flavipes fluorescing under 365 nanometer ultraviolet light Pleuroloma.flavipes.ultraviolet.jpg
Pleuroloma flavipes fluorescing under 365 nanometer ultraviolet light

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Xystodesmidae</span> Family of millipedes

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<i>Motyxia</i> Genus of millipedes

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Harold F. Loomis</span> American botanist and myriapodologist (1896-1976)

Harold Frederick Loomis was an American botanist and myriapodologist known for his contributions to agronomy, plant pathology, and millipede taxonomy. He worked for the U.S. Department of Agriculture for over four decades, studying diseases of crop plants, and was a colleague of Orator F. Cook. He also made major contributions to the natural history of Central America and the West Indies, naming over 500 species of millipedes in total. He co-described with Cook the leggiest animal on earth: Illacme plenipes, with over 700 legs.

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<i>Xystocheir</i> Genus of millipedes

Xystocheir is a genus of millipedes in the family Xystodesmidae. The genus is endemic to California in the United States, where it is distributed in the Coast Ranges and the Sierra Nevada.

<i>Brachycybe</i> Genus of millipedes

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<i>Parafontaria</i> Genus of millipedes

Parafontaria is a genus of "flat-backed" millipedes consisting of 13 species native to Japan, where they are referred to as train millipedes. This is because some species exhibit periodical swarming behavior during which large numbers congregate and can impact train passage when this congregation occurs on tracks. Documentation of this event goes back to 1920. Individuals vary from around 3.5 to 6 cm as adults, and feed on leaf litter as well as soil, making them comparable to earthworms in facilitating decomposition and soil nutrient cycling.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Haplodesmidae</span> Family of millipedes

Haplodesmidae is a family of millipedes in the order Polydesmida. Species occur in East Asia, Southeast Asia, and Oceania, although some species have been introduced to the New world tropics. Species are small bodied, often with elaborate sculpturing on the tergites, and some species are capable of rolling into a near-complete ball.

<i>Apheloria</i> Genus of millipedes

Apheloria is a genus of flat-backed millipedes in the family Xystodesmidae, occurring in the central and southeastern United States, and ranging as far north as southern Quebec, Canada. They are aposematically colored in black and contrasting reds and yellows, and some species in the Appalachian Mountains resemble species of Brachoria where they co-occur, a phenomenon known as Müllerian mimicry.

Brachoria dentata, the Pennington Gap mimic millipede, is an Appalachian mimic millipede in the Xystodesmidae family.

<i>Pseudopolydesmus</i> Genus of millipedes

Pseudopolydesmus is a genus of flat-backed millipedes in the family Polydesmidae.

<i>Pleuroloma</i> Genus of millipedes

Pleuroloma is a genus of flat-backed millipedes in the family Xystodesmidae. There are at least 4 described species in Pleuroloma.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nearctodesmidae</span> Family of millipedes

Nearctodesmidae is a family of flat-backed millipedes in the order Polydesmida. There are about 7 genera and 17 described species in Nearctodesmidae.

<i>Nannaria</i> Genus of millipedes

The genus Nannaria, commonly known as twisted-claw millipedes, is a genus of millipedes in the family Xystodesmidae first described by Ralph Chamberlin in 1918. In 2022, entomologists Derek Hennen, Jackson Means and Paul Marek discovered and described 17 new species, which expanded the size of Nannaria to 78, making it the largest genus of Xystodesmidae.

<i>Cherokia</i> Genus of millipedes

Cherokia Chamberlin, 1949 is a genus consisting of a single species, Cherokia georgiana. Commonly known as the wrinkled flat-backed millipede, this species belongs to the order Polydesmida and the family Xystodesmidae. It inhabits forests in the southeastern United States, particularly those with hemlock, maple, tulip poplar, rhododendron, cedar, and spruce-fir trees.

<i>Nannaria swiftae</i> Species of millipede

Nannaria swiftae, also known as the Swift twisted-claw millipede or Taylor Swift's millipede, is a species of millipede in the family Xystodesmidae. It is found only in the Appalachian mountains of the U.S. state of Tennessee. It was discovered and described in 2022 by entomologists Derek Hennen, Jackson Means and Paul Marek, who expanded the genus Nannaria to 78 species. They named the species in honor of American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift.

References

  1. Hennen, D.; Brown, J. (2021). Millipedes of Ohio field guide (PDF). Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of Wildlife, Columbus, OH. pp. 1–75.
  2. Means, J.; Hennen, D.; Tanabe, T.; Marek, P. (2021). "Phylogenetic Systematics of the Millipede Family Xystodesmidae". Insect Systematics and Diversity. 5 (2): 1–26. doi:10.1093/isd/ixab003. hdl: 10919/102616 .
  3. Marek, P.; Tanabe, T.; Sierwald, P. (2014). "A species catalog of the millipede family Xystodesmidae (Diplopoda: Polydesmida)". Virginia Museum of Natural History Special Publications. 17: 1–117.
  4. Shelley, R. (1980). "Revision of the milliped genus Pleuroloma (Polydesmida: Xystodesmidae)". Canadian Journal of Zoology. 58 (2): 129–168. doi:10.1139/z80-017.
  5. Williams, S.; Ward, D. (1950). "An unusual aggregation of the milliped Zinaria butleri (McNeill)". Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science. 60: 329–331.
  6. Marek, P.; Bond, J. (2009). "A Müllerian mimicry ring in Appalachian millipedes". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA. 106 (24): 9755–9760. Bibcode:2009PNAS..106.9755M. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0810408106 . PMC   2700981 . PMID   19487663.