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This giant desert centipede, Scolopendra heros was discovered to be incubating eggs, layed sometime between 4:00 PM Saturday May 6 and 10:00 AM Tuesday May 9. The specimen was accessioned for SASI's teaching collection on March 22, a few days after it was dug up on a construction site near Tanque Verde Loop Road in east Tucson. SASI's Steve Prchal says "its the largest I have seen in 30 years of centipede watching. This is only the second time we have had viable eggs laid. At 10 days everything looks promising."
In 1987 SASI had a centipede lay eggs, also from a wild mating. It took approximately 3 weeks for the eggs to hatch and another 3 weeks for the neonates to molt. During this entire time, the mother was very attentive to them.
On May 31, the eggs flattened out somewhat and one could begin to see the form of the centipede within. The mother was very protective, staying curled around them. She had not eaten or had any water since the eggs were laid.
The eggs hatched June 12. The young centipedes were only about an eigth of an inch long. At first the babies remained motionless, but the next day they had almost doubled their length and were wiggling around in the protective curl of their mother.
These pictures were taken during the first week.
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