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#yellow spotted millipede
onenicebugperday · 1 year
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@digita1garden​ submitted: Secondary submission due to huge number of bug pics I accumulate. Various location in this post: the first six photos are from Oregon, the seventh is from California, and the final is my departed pet 🦵. He was my good companion for a year and a half and I miss him, but I still love millipedes. I would love ID’s particularly of the millipedes, as they are of particular interest to me.
Thank you very much, I hope you have appreciated my various bugs! :)
MILLIPEDE TIME. My favorite time, as it happens. RIP to your beautiful pet millipede, I hope he loved a long and leggy life. I assume you know the species on that one. Most of the others look tidal/marine, which is not something I know much about! Although I would like to bring attention to the BEAUTIFUL bright green rockweed isopod in the sixth photo. What a lovely little friend. Seventh photo looks like a Pacific sand crab probably? Idk again not my specialty.
As for the millipedes, photos 1 and 2 are a yellow-spotted millipede, Harpaphe haydeniana. Photos 3 and 4 (which I’m assuming are the same individual?) look like Californiulus euphanus!
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halomancer · 2 years
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:D
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davejordan5 · 2 years
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Yellow Spotted Millipede . . . . #yellow #spotted #millipede #green #plant #plants #linear #insect #insects #india #maharashtra #indianinsects #photooftheday #davejordan_5 https://www.instagram.com/p/Ci4K7UFpNT4/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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crevicedwelling · 11 months
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These centipedes have crawled into a puddle and drowned. Do you know why? (Northwestern California)
not centipedes, but Harpaphe haydeniana millipedes. I’m not sure why exactly they’ve drowned en masse, but others have observed this:
Pacific Forest Millipedes (Harpaphe haydeniana), adults, drowning & dead
flickr
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Round 1 Match 52
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Glowworm: "They’re weird glowing beetles where the females resemble grubs and are difficult to distinguish from the larvae (that is, they’re larviform), while the males are much smaller winged beetles with giant feathery antennae. The larvae and females (but not males) glow in a similar manner to fireflies from a pair of green or yellow glowing spots on each body segment, and Phrixothrix sp. also have a head that glows bright red. They don’t seem to use their glowing abilities primarily for mating (males use their sensitive antennae to track down females by scent, and larvae glow the same as adults) and the reason they glow is unknown but presumed to be aposematism, weird part is they glow constantly and don’t seem able to turn the lights off. They’re specialist predators of large millipedes, the issue is that millipedes have toxic secretions that ooze from glands when threatened. Many predators that feed on toxic prey simply evolve immunity, but glowworms aren’t immune- instead they bite millipedes and inject them with a paralyzing venom that incapacitates millipedes so quickly they don’t have a chance to release much of their secretions. They then eat the millipedes by very carefully hollowing them out to eat the meat that isn’t contaminated by the toxins."
Sea Sheep: "one of v few non-single-celled moving critters that photosynthesizes"
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sir-squibbly · 2 months
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Big Bug Appreciation Post! (1/2)
For anyone who’s been on my blog, or has interacted with me, it’s no surprise I’m a bug enthusiast. But I don’t think I’ve ever made an official bug appreciation post, and there are a lot of bugs in my state that I think are super neat, so I wanted to briefly talk about them here. Not all of them will be insects though.
Unfortunately, I won’t be putting in any isopods or roaches because my state doesn’t have a whole lot of those guys that I would consider “particularly special.” But just note that I do appreciate isopods and roaches, and think that they have a great impact on their natural environments.
Anyway, onto the bugs!
Blue-Winged Wasp
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These babes usually hang out in the dog fennel near my yard, and I think they’re very pretty wasps. Their wings are an iridescent blue (hence the name), and their yellow spots are quite cute. They're also relatively chill, so you can stand pretty close to them and they wouldn’t care.
2. Common Paper Wasp
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They’re everywhere, but I’d be lying if I said they weren’t pretty either. I think that they have a really neat color palette and super cool pattern to them. I’ve had personal experience with them, and I’ve always made sure that when I went on my balcony, that I didn’t present as a threat to them. Overall, I enjoyed sitting with these pretty critters.
3. Giant Leopard Moth
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They look like snow leopards! Ironically enough, similar to how snow leopards are closely related to tigers, leopard moths are closely related to tiger moths (in fact, they’re in the same family). I raised one of these guys. His name was Napoleon, and he was the fanciest little guy 🩵.
4. Amber Snail
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It’s usually stated online that amber snails are a pretty rare species. So I think it was pretty neat how I once found five or six on my mom’s calla lilies. They’re very tiny and very adorable, ‘nuff said.
5. Golden Sill Orb Weaver
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A huge species of orb weaver that I think is absolutely gorgeous. These gals can get big, and I mean BIG. But no matter the size, it’s always a treat to see them during walks into the woods.
6. Agapostemon Sweat Bee
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Agapostemon is actually just a genus of sweat bee, and I’ve personally come across at least two species. All I really need to say about these guys is that they’re metallic green bees, and the ones that live near my house are surprisingly mega chill (I still wouldn’t hold one tho lol).
7. Bee Fly
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Maybe not as cute as their Japanese relatives, but they’re still whimsical little fairy creatures that I would absolutely pet in a heartbeat (if given the chance).
8. Flatback Millipede
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I just wanted to bring up how metal I think these guys are. 10/10, absolutely fire little guys 🔥🔥🔥.
9. Eastern Pondhawk
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They’re everywhere in the local pond and I love them. They’re one of my favorite examples of dimorphism because of how cool the females look (they’re the green ones). But sometimes it can be hard to distinguish a male and a female because younger males are more green. Still, they’re cool bugs.
10. Violet Dancer
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In my opinion, one of the prettiest species of damselflies. I’ve encountered one of these before (at a swamp). They’re just as vibrant as in the pictures 💜.
11. Ebony Jewelwing
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Another beautiful damselfly! This time, on a larger scale. These can also be found in swamps, and their metallic green color is super cool.
12. Swallowtails (Just in General)
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(Pipevine Swallowtail in the picture)
Swallowtails are my state’s official butterfly, and the reason for that is pretty simple: They’re literally everywhere. The most common is the Eastern Tiger, but there are other species, such as: The Black Swallowtail, Zebra Swallowtail, Pipevine Swallowtail, and probably even more. Another neat thing about them is that they’re in the same family as the world’s largest butterfly species: The Queen Alexandra’s Birdwing. So there’s some fun lil trivia for ya 👍.
13. Golden Northern Bumblebee
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They’re very friend-shaped, and also very big. In fact, some of them can get bigger than carpenter bees. They don’t visit very often, but I really like them.
14. Variegated Fritillary
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A very close relative of the gulf fritillary. In fact, I found caterpillars of both species eating passion vine together.
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You can usually tell them apart pretty easily since Variegated caterpillars are lined with white dots. Also, fun fact: Their spines are non-stinging and completely harmless in general.
15. Larger Elm Leaf Beetle
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Super friend-shaped, and extremely lightweight (you will barely feel them on your hand). They're pretty easy to handle since they’re very docile. But they’re considered pests to certain plants, so they’re not very liked by gardeners.
16. Golden Tortoise Beetle
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Also friend-shaped, but very tiny and super skittish. One really interesting thing about them is that their larvae use their own feces as a shield. So, yeah, that’s a thing that they do.
17. Imperial Moth
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A close relative of the Luna Moth (they’re in the same family). They might not be the most extravagant moths, but they have a rustic charm to them, and they remind me of bananas. Also, they’re fluffy, so they’re automatically cute.
18. Pink-Striped Oakworm Moth
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A much smaller relative of the Luna Moth (also in the same family). These babes are nocturnal and absolutely adorable.
19. Antlion
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Despite being shaped like a damselfly, these fellas are more closely related to lacewings and mantidflies. You may recognize their name, and that’s because the most notable thing about antlions is their larvae (also called “doodlebugs”).
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Y’know, these silly lil guys. The ones that make pit traps to eat their favorite food: Ants. They're funky. I love them.
20. Spring Fishfly
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I just think they’re cool. They come from water.
21. Woolly Apple Aphid
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Adorable, fluffy, whimsical fairy creatures. I had the pleasure of holding one once. You can’t even feel them on your finger.
22. Red Velvet Ant/ Cow Killer
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Despite her name, she’s not actually an ant. She’s a type of wasp in the family Mutilidae, where females are wingless. These wasps (specifically the males) are called “cow killers” because of a myth that said their stings were so powerful, they could kill a cow. This isn’t true tho.
23. Crane Fly
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They look like giant mosquitoes, but fear not! They won’t hurt you! In fact, one of their nicknames is “mosquito eater.” But they don’t actually eat mosquitoes. At least, the adults don’t. They don’t even have the proper mouthparts to do that. Instead, Crane Flies feed on nectar, which makes them minor pollinators. So while they can get everywhere once they spawn, they’re not actually that big of a problem. And they’re super frail, so please be gentle if you want to hold them🤎.
24. Two-Spotted Longhorn Bee
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Absolutely adorable! They don’t visit very often, but when they do, they like to visit the sage in the garden. I usually find them frequently the same plants as the Leafcutter bees.
25. Giant Water Bug
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One of the coolest dudes ever. You’ll always find them anywhere wet, but please know that they can get BIG. They won’t charge after you, but they will bite if they feel threatened, and it will hurt. I’ve encountered these funky guys before, and I just admire them from a good distance.
26. Promachus Robber Flies
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Promachus is also just a genus of robber fly (I don’t know how many species live in my state tho). I just think they look cool. And they’re good for pest control 👍.
27. Common Checkered Skipper
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Cute little babies that are slightly blue. I have one in my bug collection.
28. Long-Tailed Skipper
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Another cute little baby. And also blue! These things are pretty common in the garden, and I’m always happy to see them.
Reached the image count limit. I’ll post the second part in a bit.
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sevenrs · 6 months
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did you know yellow spotted millipedes smell like almonds because they contain cyanide. stay safe out there don’t eat a yellow spotted millipede! but admire them theyre very cool
despite my Reputation i do not eat random floor bugs. very cool fact though, thank you :)
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metalgearemily · 7 months
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I was doing field work for my vertebrate natural history class and I found this guy, I jotted a description in my notes and I noticed he was excreting a really pungent smell which I thought was strange!! but based on the colors and smell I assumed he was a poisonous millipede. I went to id him later and he’s a yellow spotted millipede also known as the cyanide millipede 😵😵 it turns out they produce hydrogen cyanide from their bodies as a defense mechanism, it’s not enough to be harmful to humans but i just thought it was super funny that I picked him up, put him up to my face and took a huge whiff. MMMMM that good cyanide smell
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littlewigglers · 7 months
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The bugs
Hey there, I'm Ray and I keep mainly millipedes as a hobbiest and I'm still learning a lot about insects.
I have a number of millipedes and will try to keep an up to date list of species here, as well as any I've named 💕
Millipedes - Gaint Olive/striped Leg(Telodeinpus Aoutii) Adult - Just the one and she's called Shoelace! -Gaint Olive/striped Leg(Telopedinpus aoutii) juvenile x3 - Thai Rainbow(Apeuthes sp. Thailand) just the one called Rain! - Spotted Fire(Centrolobus splendidus) x 2 - Gaint Golden(Orthroporus Ornatud) x 3 - Bumblebee(Anadenobolus monilicornis) x 14 - Yellow Dragon(Orthomorpha communis)x1 - Smocky Oak(Narceus gordanus) x1 - Red-Legged (Epibolus pulchripes) x19 - Giant African train(Archispirostreptus Gigas) x3
I have 12 baby millipedes as well! I'll try to ID them once they're bigger and have more colour. But I believe they are spotted reds and MAYBE some bumblebees.
Woodlice/isopods - Wild caught ?? - Dairy cows 70-100 - Mixed Armadillidium 30+ There's tons of other speices I'd love to get in the future! The new few I plan to get if possible are:- - Candy Ball pills(Phopalomeris carnifex), such super cute little guys, I believe they're a type of pillbug? Related to millipedes? Got more research to do but I hope to get come soon! - Ivory Millipedes(Chicobolus spinigerus) their colours are so nice and they're so itty bitty! - Avatar Millipedes(Apirotreptida sp) I LOVE their yellow legs and feelings, they're the next millipedes I'd like to get once I have the funds for another tank. - Cameroon rosey leg millipede(Spirostreptidae sp) my friend got some of these and oh I loved them! They're so big and active. - Coromus Vittatus, a type of flatback Millipede that I've had before and would love another of. - Purple Ivory Millipede(Chicobolus spinigerus) I just LOVE the purple on them, they're also said to be climbers!
For other plans I want to redo the isopod tanks, get them some nicer tanks with clear glass/plastic so I can see what they're up to. More sticks and branches in the big tank to the big boys have more to climb on.
Passed pets - Bark - Coromus Vittatus
I won't be listing any that pass here that I didn't name.
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gender0bender · 2 years
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IDs: A picture of some soil with other pictures of soil imposed over it. There is a curled up centipede in the bottom right corner that has been edited to be pink and blueish. In the top left is some text that reads “ I wake in the morning and see a note left on the table; “It’s cute how you haven’t even noticed.” The writing is messy and scrawled as if by a child. I cannot explain it so I put it away. Next there is the soil on the floor, growing mounds of damp brown, soft putting and sprinklings along my carpet. Little brown stars smelling of mould. It is in all of my socks and inbetween my toes, under my nails. I pour myself some cereal and pick a single millipede out. It turns to me and rasps “You are never alone now.” The soil smells sweeter every day.”
A picture of a bathtup and tap, with green and black mould edited around the drain. There is a cockroach edited to be on the side. The text around the drain reads “I am in the bathroom kneeling before mould growing out of the bath drain. Oh my colours of green and yellow, white spots like pus, circles of blue and grey and purpling bruises along the mouth of your infection as it reaches up the clean enamel for my face. I bend over the rim, hypnotised by you. The bath rim is lined with hundreds of insects scuttling over each others bodies and snickering to themselves. “You want to eat it.” They chuckle, “You want to eat it so badly! You want it don’t you, filthy.” I kneel impotent in shame as my tongue waters thinking of tasting your mould. Instead I pick up a cockroach from the side and toss it into my mouth. I hear it laughing all the way down.” 
A picture of white bed sheets with pictures of worms in soil layered over the original picture. The text on the image reads “As I open the door to my bedroom soil spills over my slippered feet. I wade through the candy sweetness of dung and composting leaves, feeling worms ooze over my skin. My mattress is filled with maggots, I feel them under the bedsheet as I lie down. Squirming. I wriggle against them and groan as their juices soak onto my skin, iridescent musk. Darkness falls. My eyes grow useless, I enter a world of smell and taste and feelings. My hands grow to the size of a million pores, each one a mouth and a tongue and an orifice for feeling. I enter the soil which has now risen to lap at my bed. I slide into the dirt, like a child entering the womb, birth in reverse, I enter the primordial. Then I feel the soil parting like grass in an ancient forest. There you are, you who has done this to me. I smell your bleeding legs, hundreds hundreds of legs, so many legs. I am so envious, I am so desiring of your body that can exist in the same world as mine, yet which experiences it in a way I never can. “But you can. All you need to do is bow your head and let me in.”
A dark coloured background of foilage with centipedes imposed over it, there are three centipede torsoes arranged to look like one huge creature.The words in the middle read “I obey and feel a hole open at the top of my cranium I did not realise was there. Wet, dark blood gushes out. Your mouth is at the base of a long exoskeletal body, you place it over my hole and drink. I become lightheaded, something human in me breaks from the pain. You slide into me, one leg at a time. My spine is pushed back as you nestle underneath it, feet caressing my organs. I spasm in the soil. It if you who did this to me, you who took my humanity, you who made me like you. “And did you try to stop me?” ED.
Some visuals I made for some flash fiction I did a while back.
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onenicebugperday · 2 years
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@fishermod​ submitted: A leggy friend, a fuzzy (and maybe dead?) friend, a slimy friend and a spindly boi. IDs on all would be nice, but it’s mainly the millipede I’m curious about. Also wondering why the beetle has chest fuzz; that’s a bit unusual for non-bee/moth insects, isn’t it? All seen around Surrey, BC, Canada.
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Suuure the millipede is likely a yellow-spotted millipede, Harpaphe haydeniana. The beetle looks either dead or very near death. It’s common for all kinds of bugs to be fuzzy! Scarabs are some of the fuzziest beetles out there. Yours look like probably a European chafer. Obviously, given the name, it is not native.
The snail looks like it’s in the genus Cepaea, and it has a white lip on the shell, so it could be a white-lipped snail, although the brown-lipped snail is far more common in your area and despite the name, brown-lipped snails can have a white-lipped shell. So…make of that what you will.
And finally the spider is a male northern yellow sac spider!
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reksink · 9 months
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Bug delivery~
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Ebony jewelwing damselfly, a tiny fly (maybe complex Condylostylus sipho), and a yellow-and-black flat millipede
BUG DELIVERY 💚💚💚
Officially tagging this ask series Bug Delivery now, thank you Flame, it's perfect
Oh my goodness these guys are so pretty!! My favorite of the bunch has to be the flat back, I have a big soft spot for millipedes. Not to mention that it's pattern is just oh so pretty
As for our flying companions, they're masters of colors in their own right OMGA. The damselfly is living up to it's name ten-fold 💚
I always loved the 'rainbow-like' qualities of bugs, but the way flies always has a flare to I can't quite describe
Also I meant to mention this before but I'm STILL 'embarrassed' that I mixed out that millipede from last time, hehe. Embarrassed in quotes because it was an honest mistake, I could only make out 1 leg per trunk. Oh the woes of not zoning in hehe
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halomancer · 2 years
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Rules of this blog: always post videos of yellow-spotted millipedes
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graphi-horse-time · 1 year
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Got isopods recently and OH MY GOD they are the cutest things. Highlights : the napping spot in the terrarium where I’m sure to always find one or two piled up doing shit all ; they are REALLY thorough in cleaning themselves, like a cat, they clean their antennae and rub all their 14 leggies together meticulously ; I have an orange one, who I spotted a belly pouch on recently, (=pregnant), and she might have given birth?? Confused on if they are dwarf whites cuz they are well. White with a black dorsal stripe but like I just saw 7 of them piled together in the nap corner so. Leaning towards babies but time will tell. ALSO I have a random philoscia muscorum in my terrarium of Porcellio scaber bc I found it while sorting wild garlic and instead of putting it outside I threw it in there. They cohab well but I might get a terrarium just of p muscorum later cuz I like their stripes and they have a huge color variety in the wild (I saw red, orange, even yellow ones while gardening the other day. I also saw an earthworm with rainbow iridescence and a little millipede who climbed on my hand). Wow no one is reading all that have a picture everyone
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This is the sleepy spot :)
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crevicedwelling · 1 year
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Of the bugs that molt, do they have increased motion/running when they're getting ready to molt, similar to some reptiles?
bugs that molt = Ecdysozoa = arthropods, nematodes, velvet worms, tardigrades, some other weird little guys. I don’t really know how any behave firsthand except for the arthropods I’ve kept.
sort of depends on the species but in many cases it’s precisely the opposite. tarantulas actually flip on their backs and remain motionless for hours prior to molting, centipedes get very stiff (and turn yellowish due to the new cuticle separating from the old) in premolt and in my experience tend to fast for a good few weeks before ecdysis. millipedes even more so; they’ll burrow as deep as they can and might not come up for another month, sporting a fresh new exoskeleton. some mantises might not move for a day or more if they find a good spot to hang to molt, and like many insects anchor their feet in place before molting so that they can cling to good solid footing—their own exuvia—as they emerge.
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(Scolopendra hainanum between molts and one in premolt, with the old yellowed exoskeleton separating)
isopods with their weird biphasic molt are different, and besides the actual process of shedding + 10-30 min of drying, they just get on with their lives before and after. they have it easy! same with things like maggots and other soft-bodied larvae, their exoskeletons are basically thin cellophane and are easy to wiggle out of and it doesn’t slow them down much.
for some aquatic arthropods it’s a bit different, Triops molt by thrashing themselves out of their old skins & it only takes a few seconds sometimes! but for other aquatic creatures with more well developed shells, like lobsters and big crabs, molting is quite laborious and lengthy even with the added support of water.
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(Porcellio laevis “Dairy Cow” with his anterior exuvia, Scolopendra hainanum the middle of ecdysis w/ respiratory tract lining “strings” visible)
molting for reptiles literally is shedding some skin, but molting for arthropods is shedding a skeleton and then some! since a soft new exoskeleton is grown beneath the old one, but before it’s shed the animal has to sit inside a now too-small, very rigid suit of armor, I would assume the general pattern is for arthropods to move less before molting. the lining of the respiratory tract and some of the other internal organs that are part of the cuticle also get molted, plus legs/appendages can get stuck in molt, so also best to find somewhere safe and not leave until hardened up!
a good example of this might be cicadas, which emerge from the ground as nymphs, climb to find a perch, and then don’t move at all except for the muscular contractions needed to break free of the exuvia. that’s why cicada shells are often posed in curious ways—they’re a snapshot frozen in time of a cicada’s last moments as a juvenile.
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(teneral Neotibicen linnei)
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animal71154 · 1 year
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okokok i wanna make a list of interesting animals that i like and some of which i have trouble remembering sometimes. i will edit this over time. ok. i thought we would be able to do readmores on mobile by now but apparently not. ok (i also always forget the word reconcile so that can be here too)
...
MARSUPIALS common brushtail possum, quoll, tasmanian devil, thylacine, cuscus (common spotted cuscus, sulawesi bear cuscus, silky cuscus), opossum (white-eared opossum, four-eyed opossum, yapok/water opossum), tree kangaroo, glider (greater glider, yellow-bellied glider)
RODENTS rat, mouse, nutria, Gambian pouched rat, capybara, Brazilian porcupine, jerboa (long-eared jerboa), chinchilla, vizcacha
MUSTELIDS ferret, weasel, stoat, marten (yellow-throated marten), skunk (spotted skunk), mink, greater hog badger
PRIMATES tarsier, aye aye, ring tailed lemur, japanese macaque, gelada, marmoset (pygmy marmoset), capuchin, spider monkey (red-faced spider monkey), howler monkey, white-faced saki
VIVERRIDS binturong, civet (owston's palm civet, African civet, banded palm civet), linsang, genet
PROCYONIDS kinkajou, coati, ringtail/cacomistle, raccoon
HOGS wild boar (really been enjoying these lately) , red river hog, pygmy hog
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FELINES margay, rusty-spotted cat, black-footed cat, asiatic golden cat, bornean bay cat, little spotted cat/oncilla, jaguarundi, sandcat, lynx, bobcat, caracal, serval, fishing cat, pallas' cat
ANTEATERS tamandua, giant anteater, silky anteater, pangolin
LAPINES rabbit (flemish giant rabbit, sumatran striped rabbit, Netherland dwarf broken chocolate colour (someone said i would be this if i was a bunny)), hare
OTHER MAMMALS fossa, mongoose (yellow mongoose, common slender mongoose), elephant shrew (black and rufous elephant shrew), treeshrew, colugo, spotted hyena, antelope (oryx, roan antelope), honduran white bat
FISH eel (New Zealand longfin eel, moray eel, gulper eel), black ghost knife fish
ARACHNIDS jumping spider, house spider, daddy long legs, huntsman spider, tarantula, camel spider, tailless whip scorpion, horseshoe crab
OTHER INVERTEBRATES snail (giant African snail), slug, slater/pill bug, isopod, praying mantis, bee (honeybee, bumble bee), moth, millipede, centipede, earwig, beetle, sand hopper
...
ok now im tired and im going to go to bed. i will readmore this tomorrow when im on the computer maybe. goodnight
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