< Scientists Find First ‘True Millipede’ in Australia
By Dan Friedell
26 December 2021

Scientists drilled a small, deep hole in the Goldfields-Esperance area of Western Australia and found a true millipede.

The word millipede means "a thousand feet," but until now, no insect had ever been found with that many legs, or feet.

The millipede in Australia had 1,306 legs.

A microscope view of the legs of a male individual of the newly identified millipede species Eumillipes persephone discovered deep underground in Australia. Marek et al/Scientific Reports/Handout via REUTERS
A microscope view of the legs of a male individual of the newly identified millipede species Eumillipes persephone discovered deep underground in Australia. Marek et al/Scientific Reports/Handout via REUTERS

The scientists are calling it Eumillipes persephone.

Paul Marek studies insects for Virginia Tech University. He is the lead author of a study recently published in Scientific Reports.

Marek's co-writer is Bruno Buzatto, a biologist in Perth, Australia. He called the discovery a "stunning animal, a marvel of evolution."

The name means "true thousand feet" and uses the name of Persephone, the queen of the underworld in Greek mythology.

The scientists said one of the females had 1,306 legs. Another had 998. The males did not have as many legs. Scientists said the number of legs is not always the same because the insects molt, which means to lose their outer layer as they grow. They add more legs throughout their lives.

The writers said the insects need all the legs to move through small openings in the deep soil. They live about 60 meters underground and are about 95 millimeters long with a width of less than 1 millimeter.

Until now, the longest-known millipede was from California. It had 750 legs.

Buzatto said the insect comes from a "harsh," dry area in Australia where it is hard to find any millipedes on the surface.

The millipedes do not have eyes. Instead they use touch and smell to move through their environment. They come from a species of insects that eat fungi.

The Goldfields-Esperance area in Australia is known for mining the metals gold, lithium and vanadium.

Scientists say millipedes first appeared 400 million years ago.

There are about 13,000 species known.

The insects play a key role in their environments by eating plants and fungi. They leave behind sugar, carbon and nitrogen.

"These nutrients can then be used by future generations of life," Marek said.

I'm Dan Friedell.

Dan Friedell adapted this story for Learning English based on reporting by the Reuters news agency. Susan Shand was the editor.

How would you react to seeing a creature with so many legs? Tell us in the Comments Section and visit 51VOA.COM.

Words in This Story

drill - v. to make a hole in something with a drill (a tool used for making holes in hard substances)

author - n. a person who has written something

stunning – adj. ideas that are believed by many people but that are not true

mythology – n. ideas that are believed by many people but that are not true

harsh – adj. severe or cruel : not kind, unpleasant

marvel – n. someone or something that is extremely good, skillful, etc. : a wonderful or marvelous person or thing

fungi – n. (plural of fungus) any one of a group of living things (such as molds, mushrooms, or yeasts) that often look like plants but have no flowers and that live on dead or decaying things

role - n. a part that someone or something has in a particular activity or situation

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