Abstract

The density and surface activity of the millipedes in a quarter of an acre of a sycamore ash wood are described. Seven species were extracted by Tullgren funnels from samples of soil and litter over five years and were also caught in pitfall traps during a further two years; four other species occurred occasionally in the traps. Each square metre of the site supported 100 individuals over the winter, rising to 300 in the summer. Of these, 85 % belonged to three species, Iulus scandinavius, Polydesmus angustus and P. denticulatus.Male I. scandinavius become adult in either the ninth, tenth or eleventh stadium; females in the tenth and eleventh. Eggs are laid in spring and these take three years to become adults which breed and then die. The majority of Polydesmus spp. in the samples are young belonging to the first six of the eight free‐living stadia. The adults fell into the traps in the summer and newly emerged young appear in the samples at this time. They overwinter in their first year mainly as fifth stadia; some might reach maturity (eighth stadia) in the summer following, but it is not certain that they could breed at this time.The pattern of dispersion of lulus is fairly even and is correlated with the distribution of leaf litter but the Polydesmus spp. are highly aggregated. All stadia of lulus fall into the traps but only the last two of Polydesmus. The aggregation of Polydesmus spp. appears to be correlated with the relative inactivity of the younger stadia. The estimates of density of Polydesmus spp. are unreliable because of their aggregation but those of lulus have determinable limits and it is possible to derive rough though meaningful standing crop, production and life‐table data. The overwintering standing crop of lulus consists of the survivors of three generations of 5, 2.2 and 1.4% of the original eggs laid; it has a fresh weight of about 1.25 g and a production in the order of 1.5–2.5 g/m2.

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