The species possess long cylindrical bodies with
sclerites (skeletal plates consisting of ventral
sternites, lateral
pleurites, and dorsal
tergites) fused into complete rings. Juliform millipedes possess defensive
repugnatorial glands on all body segments except the last few,[1][2] and are the only known millipedes to produce
quinones in their defensive secretions.[3] Juliform males have two pairs of
gonopods consisting of the modified 8th and 9th pair of legs: in Julida and Spirobolida the posterior gonopods (9th leg pair) are primarily involved in sperm-transferring, while in Spirostreptida it is the anterior gonopods (8th leg pair). Juliformians also lack
Tömösváry organs and have a large
collum (first body segment) which overhangs the rear of the head.[4]
Simplified cross section (A) and side view (B) of a juliform millipede segment
Male Ommatoiulus moreleti (Julida, Julidae) showing juliform characteristics: large collum, two pair of gonopods, and fused, cylindrical body segments. The hook-shaped first leg pair is unique to Julida.
Taxonomy
The
Xyloiuloidea is an extinct superfamily of fossil millipedes of
uncertain placement within the Juliformia. Known from the
Lower Devonian to the
Upper Pennsylvanian, Xyloiuloidea consists of four families and several genera. The group was formerly considered a suborder of Spirobolida, but newly discovered species in 2006 required a reconsideration of classification, and the order to which Xyloiuloidea belongs remains undetermined.[5]
^Wilson, Heather M. (2006). "Juliformian millipedes from the lower Devonian of Euramerica: implications for the timing of millipede cladogenesis in the Paleozoic". Journal of Paleontology. 80 (4): 638–649.
doi:
10.1666/0022-3360(2006)80[638:JMFTLD]2.0.CO;2.
The species possess long cylindrical bodies with
sclerites (skeletal plates consisting of ventral
sternites, lateral
pleurites, and dorsal
tergites) fused into complete rings. Juliform millipedes possess defensive
repugnatorial glands on all body segments except the last few,[1][2] and are the only known millipedes to produce
quinones in their defensive secretions.[3] Juliform males have two pairs of
gonopods consisting of the modified 8th and 9th pair of legs: in Julida and Spirobolida the posterior gonopods (9th leg pair) are primarily involved in sperm-transferring, while in Spirostreptida it is the anterior gonopods (8th leg pair). Juliformians also lack
Tömösváry organs and have a large
collum (first body segment) which overhangs the rear of the head.[4]
Simplified cross section (A) and side view (B) of a juliform millipede segment
Male Ommatoiulus moreleti (Julida, Julidae) showing juliform characteristics: large collum, two pair of gonopods, and fused, cylindrical body segments. The hook-shaped first leg pair is unique to Julida.
Taxonomy
The
Xyloiuloidea is an extinct superfamily of fossil millipedes of
uncertain placement within the Juliformia. Known from the
Lower Devonian to the
Upper Pennsylvanian, Xyloiuloidea consists of four families and several genera. The group was formerly considered a suborder of Spirobolida, but newly discovered species in 2006 required a reconsideration of classification, and the order to which Xyloiuloidea belongs remains undetermined.[5]
^Wilson, Heather M. (2006). "Juliformian millipedes from the lower Devonian of Euramerica: implications for the timing of millipede cladogenesis in the Paleozoic". Journal of Paleontology. 80 (4): 638–649.
doi:
10.1666/0022-3360(2006)80[638:JMFTLD]2.0.CO;2.