Millipedes belong to the class Diplopoda, which is divided into several orders. The main orders of millipedes include Julida, Polydesmida, and Spirobolida, among others. Each order varies in characteristics such as body shape and habitat preferences. Millipedes are known for their cylindrical bodies and numerous legs, typically having two pairs of legs per body segment.
Millipedes are a class, not an order. The class Diplopoda (millipedes) has 15 different orders. The Giant African Millipede for example is in the order Julida. The Common American Millipede is in the order Spirobolida. Millipedes are a class, not an order. The class Diplopoda (millipedes) has 15 different orders. The Giant African Millipede for example is in the order Julida. The Common American Millipede is in the order Spirobolida.
I lost count on the millipede's legs! That millipede should not be blue.
the spider consumes the millipede
yes a millipede is an invertabrate. :)
You can find a millipede in the sand
Get millipede killer!!
A millipede is a small invertebrate belonging to the Phylum Arthropoda.Unlike its name seems to suggest, the millipede does not have one million legs.I tried counting the legs on a millipede, but it wouldn't stay still long enough. My cat was fascinated as it sat in the garden watching a millipede. The millipede tickled as it crawled over my foot.
a millipede is an exoskeletal invertebrate!!!!
millipede
No. A millipede is a myriapod, which is a kind of arthropod.
Since millipede is a noun, the only opposite for millipede is "not millipede". Since a millipede has a maximum number of "legs" an antonym might be "snake" with no legs.
The millipede genus name is Diplopoda.