Atlas of European millipedes 2: Order Julida (Class Diplopoda)
Author
Kime, Richard Desmond
847CC68F-00BF-4DAB-8E53-B7A3384D66C1
Email: deskime 2 @ aol. com & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: 847 CC 68 F- 00 BF- 4 DAB- 8 E 53 - B 7 A 3384 D 66 C 1
deskime2@aol.com
Author
Enghoff, Henrik
FB09A817-000D-43C3-BCC4-2BC1E5373635
urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: FB 09 A 817 - 000 D- 43 C 3 - BCC 4 - 2 BC 1 E 5373635 & Corresponding author: henghoff @ snm. ku. dk
henghoff@snm.ku.dk
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2017
2017-08-29
346
1
299
journal article
21780
10.5852/ejt.2017.346
39926986-58ae-4af8-831c-689b7c8dbbc6
2118-9773
3866525
9600FFB8-3FB9-4522-B030-D5A6B145EDEB
116.
Cylindroiulus caeruleocinctus
(Wood, 1864)
Iulus caeruleocinctus
Wood, 1864
.
Julus teutonicus
Pocock, 1900
.
Cylindroiulus londinensis caeruleocinctus
Brade-Birks, 1922
.
Cylindroulus teutonicus
auct.
Cylindroiulus londinensis
auct.
Distribution
AT, BE,
CH
, CZ, DE, DK-DEN, EE, ES-SPA, FI, FR-FRA, GB-GRB, GB-NI, HU, IE, IT-ITA, LT, LU, LV, NL, NO-NOR, PL, PT-POR, RU-KGD, RU-RUW, SE, UA. Widely distributed from
Iberia
to
Russia
but not south of the Alps and the Carpathians. Mainly Central Continental. – Also widely introduced into
Canada
and the
USA
.
Habitat
An abundant species in much of Central Europe, often dominant in open habitats, especially grassland, and characteristic of dry grassland on chalk and limestone in many regions. But it also occurs in hedges and small woods, though very rarely in forests. Common in parks, gardens, cemeteries, waste places and arable land, and over much of its range it is strongly synanthropic. Many large populations have been found in urban areas;
Davis (1979
,
1982
) found it the commonest species to fall into pitfall traps in London, while
Fairhurst (1984)
found the optimum habitat in the
United Kingdom
to be loamy agricultural soils. It may be found under wet leaves in parks and beside rivers in towns. While considered calcicole by many authors (e.g.,
Haacker 1968
found a strong preference for alkaline soils), there are records from other
types
of soil. The same author indicated that its preferred foods were broadleaves, followed by grass and moss.
It both hibernates and aestivates at some depth in the soil and shows a marked activity peak in the spring and a lesser one in the autumn. Principally a lowland species, found up to
1240 m
in
Switzerland
(
Pedroli-Christen 1993
) and on a xerorendzina with evergreen oaks (
Quercus
) at
940 m
and a pasture on brown earth at
1130 m
in the Spanish Pyrenees (
Serra
et al.
1996
). There are many records of this species attacking crops.
Remarks
As can be seen from the synonyms there has been much confusion in the past as to the identity of this species (see, e.g.,
Mauriès 1964
;
David 1995
). As a general rule all records of
C. teutonicus
and records of
C. londinensis
from countries other than
Spain
,
France
,
Ireland
and
Great Britain
relate to
C. caeruleocinctus
.