traveling cherry millipede

(Pleuroloma flavipes)

Conservation Status
IUCN Red List

not listed

NatureServe

NNR - Unranked

Minnesota

not listed

 
traveling cherry millipede
Photo by Greg Watson
 
Description

Traveling cherry millipede is a common, widespread, and well-known, flat-backed millipede. It occurs in the United States east of the Great Plains and in Ontario, Canada. It is found on the ground and under logs in deciduous and mixed woodlands and in adjacent fields and other open areas. Occasionally large numbers appear in mass aggregations, sometimes migrating across a field or forest floor.

The adult is to 1916 (10 to 40 mm) long and appears flattened when viewed from the side. The head is large and round. It is blind, it has no eyes. There are 20 body rings. Each ring is covered above with a hard, rigid plate (tergite). Each tergite is blackish-brown with yellow or yellowish markings, a wrinkled or roughened surface, and a distinct horizontal ridge (keel). There is no dorsal groove. The color pattern is variable, common throughout a single population but differing between neighboring populations. The rear (posterior) margin is has a yellow band that widest in the middle. The lateral margin of each tergite is slightly extended horizontally, and this extension is usually yellow. There is sometimes a wedge-shaped yellow or orange mark at the forward (anterior) corners of each tergite.

The legs are yellow. Segments 5 through 18 each have two pairs of legs, segments 3 and 4 each have one pair of legs, and segments 2 and 19 have no legs. There is one pair of legs in front of segment 3, but this is not on segment 2, which is little more than an upper plate. On the male, the front pair of legs on the seventh ring are modified as reproductive structures (gonopods). The structure of the gonopod is unique to each species and is an important identifying feature. The hind pair of legs on the seventh ring of the male are normal walking legs. The ninth and tenth legs (L9 and L10) on both sexes are are normal walking legs, not reduced in size.

 

Size

Total length: to 1916 (10 to 40 mm)

 

Similar Species

 
Habitat

Mixed and deciduous forests, and adjacent fields and other open areas

Biology

Season

 

 

Behavior

 

 

Life Cycle

Eggs and juveniles overwinter in chambers in the soil deep enough to not freeze.

 

Food

Rotting vegetation and fungi

Distribution

Distribution Map

 

Sources

24, 29, 30, 82, 83.

Shelley, Rowland M. and Snyder, Bruce A., "Millipeds from the eastern Dakotas and western Minnesota, USA, with an account of Pseudopolydesmus serratus (Say, 1821) (Polydesmida: Polydesmidae); first published records from six states and the District of Columbia" (2012). Insecta Mundi. 752.

6/20/2025    
     

Occurrence

 

Taxonomy

Subphylum

Myriapoda (myriapods)

Class

Diplopoda (millipedes)

Subclass

Chilognatha

Infraclass

Helminthomorpha (worm-like millipedes)

Subterclass

Eugnatha

Superorder

Merocheta

Order

Polydesmida (flat-backed millipedes)

Suborder

Leptodesmidea

Superfamily

Xystodesmoidea

Family

Xystodesmidae (cherry millipedes)

Subfamily

Rhysodesminae

Tribe

Rhysodesmini

Genus

Pleuroloma

   

Subordinate Taxa

 

   

Synonyms

Fontaria brunnea

Fontaria butlerii

Fontaria virginiensis ssp. castanea

Polydesmus butleri

Zinaria brunnea

Zinaria busheyi

Zinaria butleri

Zinaria iowa

Zinaria mima

Zinaria miribilia

Zinaria proxima

Zinaria rubrilata

Zinaria urbana

Zinaria warreni

 

   

Common Names

traveling cherry millipede

 

 

 

 

 

 

Glossary

Tergum; tergite

The upper (dorsal), hardened plate on a segment of the thorax or abdomen of an arthropod or myriapod. Plural: terga.

 

 

 

 

 

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Greg Watson

traveling cherry millipede

I photographed this cute little guy in my backyard in La Crescent, MN. He was crawling on rocks in my small water feature that I have in my backyard.

Kyle Roggenbuck

traveling cherry millipede
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Simply email us at info@MinnesotaSeasons.com.
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Greg Watson
6/16/2021

Location: La Crescent MN

I photographed this cute little guy in my backyard in La Crescent, MN. He was crawling on rocks in my small water feature that I have in my backyard.

traveling cherry millipede

Kyle
Roggenbuck

6/24/2020

Location: Lochness Park, Blaine, MN

traveling cherry millipede

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Created: 7/4/2020

Last Updated:

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