Diamondback Soil Centipede

Geophilus vittatus

Geophilus vittatus is a centipede in the family Geophilidae.
Diamondback Soil Centipede - Geophilus vittatus Centipedes are metameric, which means that their body is divided into segments, which are mostly all identical. Metamerization is an important phenomenon that humans share with centipedes. In humans, metamerization is seen in the repeating spinal discs in our backbones.

Habitat: Leaf litter in a deciduous forest Diamondback Soil Centipede,Fall,Geophilus,Geophilus vittatus,Geotagged,United States,centipede

Appearance

Identification:
-dark, diamond-shaped markings down the back
-uniform body width
-number of pairs of legs in the 50s-60s

Distribution

Abundant throughout temperate North America.

Reproduction

The females guard their eggs by coiling around them, like some snakes. They clean them, and secrete poisons from their underside to deter predators. If disturbed they will defend their young ferociously, although they are far too small to harm a person.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

https://bugguide.net/node/view/904961
Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassChilopoda
OrderGeophilomorpha
FamilyGeophilidae
GenusGeophilus
SpeciesGeophilus vittatus