Current:Home > MarketsOliver James Montgomery-A new millipede species is crawling under LA. It’s blind, glassy and has 486 legs -FundTrack
Oliver James Montgomery-A new millipede species is crawling under LA. It’s blind, glassy and has 486 legs
TradeEdge Exchange View
Date:2025-04-09 22:37:17
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Oliver James MontgomeryCity of Angels, a metropolis of freeways and traffic, has a newly discovered species named in its honor: The Los Angeles Thread Millipede.
The tiny arthropod was found just underground by naturalists at a Southern California hiking area — near a freeway, a Starbucks and an Oakley sunglasses store.
About the length of a paperclip but skinny as pencil lead, it’s translucent and sinuous like a jellyfish tentacle. The creature burrows four inches below ground, secretes unusual chemicals and is blind, relying on hornlike antennas protruding from its head to find its way.
Under a microscope, the millipede with its 486 legs and helmet-like head resembles a creature in a Hollywood monster film.
“It’s amazing to think these millipedes are crawling in the inner cracks and crevices between little pieces of rock below our feet in Los Angeles,” said entomologist Paul Marek of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute. He was part of the research team that included scientists from West Virginia University, and the University of California, Berkeley.
Their findings on the species, whose scientific name is Illacme socal, were published June 21 in the journal ZooKeys. The species’ vernacular name is Los Angeles Thread Millipede.
“It goes to show that there’s this undiscovered planet underground,” Marek added.
It joins other millipedes found in the state, including the world’s leggiest creature on record — aptly named Illacme plenipes, Latin for “in highest fulfillment of feet” with 750 limbs. It was found in 1926 in a small area in Northern California.
Millipedes feed on dead organic material and without them people would be “up to our necks” in it, Marek said.
“By knowing something about the species that fulfill these really important ecological roles, we can protect them and then the environment that protects us as well,” Marek said.
iNaturalist, a citizen naturalist app, led Marek to the discovery. Naturalists Cedric Lee and James Bailey posted the critter they found when when they were out collecting slugs at Whiting Ranch Wilderness Park in nearby Orange County four years ago. The team used DNA sequencing and analysis to prove it was indeed a new species.
Lee, a doctoral student at UC Berkeley, has discovered and documented thirty centipedes species in California. He said microorganisms have been often neglected in the search for new species, but thanks to modern tools available to anyone, citizen science can be a bridge between between the natural world and the lab.
“We don’t know what’s completely out there,” Lee said. “There’s literally undescribed species right under our feet.”
Scientists estimate 10 million animal species live on Earth, but only one million have been discovered.
“What we don’t know is far more than what we know in terms of insect species and small creatures around the world,” said Brian Brown, curator of entomology at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.
After having led a four-year research project called BioSCAN, which planted insect traps throughout backyards in the city, Brown estimates 20,000 species of insects inhabit Los Angeles alone, both discovered and undiscovered.
But he worries about threats to native species such as climate change and invasive species.
“It really is going to take a lot more work and effort to try and save, try and document the species before they all go extinct,” he said.
Daniel Gluesenkamp, president of the California Institute for Biodiversity, who was not involved in the research, points to the Los Angeles Thread Millipede as the perfect example of an unexplored frontier.
“We need to be investing in local parks, we need to be saving any little patch of wild land, even if it’s surrounded by housing and parking lots,” Gluesenkamp said. “We need to know what’s there so that we can protect it and use it as a solution in the tremendously challenging times ahead.”
veryGood! (4121)
Related
- Sam Taylor
- WNBA Finals, Game 4: How to watch New York Liberty at Minnesota Lynx
- 17 students overcome by 'banned substance' at Los Angeles middle school
- Adult day centers offer multicultural hubs for older people of color
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Diablo and Santa Ana winds are to descend on California and raise wildfire risk
- After hurricane, with no running water, residents organize to meet a basic need
- Liam Payne’s Ex Aliana Mawla Shares Emotional Tribute to Singer After His Death
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- A man has been charged with murder in connection with an Alabama shooting that left 4 dead
Ranking
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Will Menendez brothers be freed? Family makes fervent plea amid new evidence
- Here’s What Halloweentown’s Kimberly J. Brown Wants to See in a 5th Installment
- 3 states renew their effort to reduce access to the abortion drug mifepristone
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Asian American evangelicals’ theology is conservative. But that doesn’t mean they vote that way
- Liam Payne’s Ex Aliana Mawla Shares Emotional Tribute to Singer After His Death
- Rumer Willis Details Coparenting Relationship With Ex Derek Richard Thomas After Split
Recommendation
Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
Asian American evangelicals’ theology is conservative. But that doesn’t mean they vote that way
After Hurricane Helene, Therapists Dispense ‘Psychological First Aid’
Latest Dominion Energy Development Forecasts Raise Ire of Virginia Environmentalists
What to watch: O Jolie night
Liam Payne was open about addiction. What he told USA TODAY about alcohol, One Direction
Paulson Adebo injury update: Saints CB breaks femur during 'Thursday Night Football' game
Lashana Lynch Is Pregnant, Expecting First Baby With Zackary Momoh