Common centipede
Did you know that in your garden there might be a fearsome predator, a fast carnivore, with modified legs near the front with which it can inject venom into its prey? It is of course, the Common centipede! But don’t worry, only smaller insects need to fear this hunter.
Fast Facts
Latin name: Lithobius forficatus
Notable feature: Brownish red in colour with long antennae at the front and a pair of long legs at the back which reach out almost as far as the front antennae, making it quite difficult to tell which end is which.
Conservation Status: Not Evaluated
Common Centipede (Lithobius forficatus) © Roger Key
The Common centipede is brownish red in colour with long antennae at the front and a pair of long legs at the back which reach out almost as far as the front antennae, making it quite difficult to tell which end is which. This question becomes even more difficult as the Common centipede can crawl backwards almost as easily as it can crawl forwards, using these long, back legs as another pair of feelers.
Common centipedes are long and thin, adults usually grow to about 3cm long, this is big for a centipede, other species that you may see in the UK are likely to be smaller than this. If you do see a centipede which is about this length, it is likely to be either the Common centipede or possibly the Banded centipede (Lithobius Variegatus). You can tell this difference between these 2 species as the Banded centipede will have stripy legs.
Legs
There are 57 different species of centipede in the UK, they can be different colours and different lengths, but they all have lots of legs. Although the name centipede suggests that they must have 100 legs, this is actually not the case. Centipedes always have an odd number of pairs of legs, different species of British centipedes can have anywhere from 15 to 101 pairs. The Common centipede, Lithobius Forficatus, and the other centipedes of the Lithobius group, (known commonly as Stone centipedes) have 15 pairs of legs.
Habitat
The Common centipede has made itself at home throughout the British Isles, they can be found in gardens, in woodland, at the seashore and will happily move into your greenhouse or tool shed. They are found at all times of year but are most numerous in spring and autumn.
Their body is quite flat which makes them ideally suited to hiding underneath logs and stones, this helps them to keep their bodies cool and moist and has the advantage of hiding them from birds and toads, who would enjoy eating them for lunch. During the hot weather Common centipedes will often burrow into the soil to help themselves to keep cool.
Hunting
Because they spend so much time in the dark, Common centipedes do not need to see very well, so they do not rely on sight when they are hunting their prey. Instead they use their antennae to sense prey and feel their way around.
When they sense a potential meal, usually a smaller insect or spider, or sometimes an earthworm or slug, they can suddenly sprint very quickly and then pounce on their victim, using their modified legs as fangs and injecting venom into their prey so that they can over power it.
The Common centipede can be a friend to the gardener, coming out at night to feast on soil pests.
Fascinating Centipede Facts
- When young centipedes hatch from eggs they look just like small adults, as they grow they shed their skin, often they develop more legs each time they shed.
- Centipedes can be found worldwide, some have even been found living in the Arctic Circle!
- Some species of Centipede mothers have been known to nurse their eggs and babies.
- When a centipede walks, it does not trip over its own feet because each leg is slightly longer than the one in front.
- Centipedes are one of the oldest animals on Earth, some have been found in fossils dating over 400 million years old!