Figure 1.Dicranogonus pix Jeekel, 1982, right gonopod telopodite, anterior views. A Holotype, from Fig. 4 in Jeekel (1982), used with permission B NMV K-10010 C AM KS.105124 D AM KS.94201 E QVM 23:46456 F QVM 23:21876. Scale bar for B–F = 0.25 mm, with focus on solenomere tip. See Fig. 3A for mapped localities.
Figure 1.Dorsal A–C and right lateral D–E views of midbody rings of freshly killed males A, D Tasmaniosoma anubis sp. n., ex QVM 23:53865 B, E Tasmaniosoma interfluminum sp. n., ex QVM 23:53866 C, F Tasmaniosoma nicolaus sp. n., paratype ex QVM 23:53860. Scale bars = 0.5 mm.
Millipede - probably Heterocladosoma sp. (Paradoxosomatidae) near Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia. Photographed on 15 March 2009.Found living under bark on eucalypt tree."There are parts needed for ID that aren't in the photos.However, the banded millipede is almost certainly a Heterocladosoma. Ifound a new species from Toowoomba's Boyce Reserve in the QueenslandMuseum collection which could be your guy." (ref. pers. comm. Bob Mesibov, Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery, Tasmania).www.inaturalist.org/observations/48278675
Three species of detritivorous artrhopods (a millipede, a darkling beetle and a pill bug) concentrated around the nest of the seed-eating ant Messor barbarus in look for remains of seeds. These concentrations happen in cloudy days, as none of these animals will be very active at full sun.