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Leggiest animal: champ millipede located after 79-year gap.


A millipede millipede (mĭl`əpēd'), elongated arthropod having many body segments and pairs of legs. Millipedes, sometimes termed thousand-legged worms, have two pairs of legs on each body segment except the first few and the last.  species with up to 750 legs, the most recorded on any animal, has turned up in its tiny native range in California after decades with no sightings, biologists say.

The Illaeme plenipes millipede has never been found beyond a 0.8-squarekilometer area in San Benito San Benito (săn bənē`tō), city (1990 pop. 20,125), Cameron co., extreme S Tex.; inc. 1911. San Benito is chiefly a processing center for citrus fruit and vegetables grown in the irrigated region of the lower Rio Grande valley.  County, several hours south of San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden , explains millipede taxonomist Paul E. Marek of East Carolina University East Carolina University is a public, coeducational, intensive research university located in Greenville, North Carolina, United States. Named East Carolina University by statue and commonly known as ECU or East Carolina  in Greenville, N.C. No biologist had recorded seeing it there since its discovery in 1926, even though specialists checked the area several times in recent years.

Last fall, though, Marek and his colleagues found males, females, and youngsters in the original site, Marek and his North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures


Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop.
 colleague Jason Bond report in the June 8 Nature.

"This is wonderful news,' says millipede specialist Robert Mesibov of the Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery The Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery is a museum located in Launceston, Tasmania. Established in 1891, the Queen Victoria has a strong reputation for its excellent collection which houses a fine exhibition of Colonial Art, contemporary craft and design, Tasmanian history and  in Launceston, Tasmania. "It shows that if we're serious about conserving biodiversity; we need to pay attention to tiny natural areas."

"This is the millipede that most closely lives up to its name," says entomologist Darrell Ubick of the California Academy of Sciences The California Academy of Sciences is one of the ten largest natural history museums in the world, and one of the oldest in the United States of America. It is located in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco.  in San Francisco. He has collected arthropods in California for years and looked for I. plenipes--unsuccessfully--several times during the 1990s.

During their studies of arthropod arthropod

Any member of the largest phylum, Arthropoda, in the animal kingdom. Arthropoda consists of more than one million known invertebrate species in four subphyla: Uniramia (five classes, including insects), Chelicerata (three classes, including arachnids and horseshoe
 diversity, Marek and Bond had been thinking about I. plenipes. When Marek went to California last Thanksgiving to visit his mother, he recruited his brother Rob to search the old site.

Even though the creature has hundreds of legs, adults are less than 3.4 centimeters long and about half a millimeter wide. "It's pretty hard to immediately tell the difference between this tiny, threadlike thing and a root hair," says Paul Marek.

After about an hour of searching on their first day, the brothers realized that one "root hair" was moving. The record-breaking species lived. "I was probably close to hyperventilating," Paul Marek says.

His luck held up during several return visits, and the brothers and Bond collected 12 specimens, with adults varying in leg number from 318 to 666. Females typically outgrow outgrow verb To change the relationship with a condition or structure by dint of ↑ age or size; while children outgrow clothing, and certain behaviors, they rarely outgrow diseases–eg, asthma  and outleg males, says Marek, and in this family, millipedes probably add legs throughout their lives.

The new finds don't top a 1926 I. plenipes specimen or even the 742 legs of a millipede recently found in Tobago.

"The number of legs is insignificant compared to the geography," says entomologist Richard Hoffman of the Virginia Museum of Natural History in Martinsville, who focuses on that state's insect diversity. The only other known members of the family containing I. plenipes live in Southeast Asia.

Marek and his colleagues used 21st-century microscopy to fill in details in the old descriptions. The male's sperm-delivery organs, for example, are "very elaborate" with fringed auxiliary parts, says Marek.

Like other millipedes, the leg champs "don't sting; they don't bite; they don't carry diseases," says Hoffman. They just convert leaf litter into soil.

However, those mild manners result in little funding for studies of the creatures. "I do millipedes at night and on the weekends," Hoffman says.
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Title Annotation:SCIENCE NEWS This Week
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 10, 2006
Words:501
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