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Scutigera-coleoptrata is the latin name for the most fearsome creature ever to enter my home, the house centipede. We first met when I visited my new apartment in Northeast Washington. It was 3:00pm, a beautiful day, and when I walked into my new kitchen, sitting in the newly renovated sink was the ugliest creature I had ever seen. 15 pair of long skinny legs, two long antennae, and an inch and a half-long body that would make Loreena Bobbitt think twice. To tell you the truth, I wanted my sizable deposit back. But I thought that like most infestations, I would be able to keep rid of them as long as we were diligent about cleaning up food and clutter. As it turns out, that's not the case with scutigera-coleoptrata. I would later find out that the house centipede is not attracted to what most humans would consider food. It is well-documented that rats, cockroaches, and most types of household mold are attracted to lettuce, tomatoes, beef, and cream cheese alike. The house centipedes (and most other species of centipede, for that matter) are hunters. They capture and eat live prey, particularly smaller insects, some so small that we don't even know we have them living in our homes. No amount of pesticide (professionally administered, of course) will get rid of them, and they rarely venture out in the open during the day, so controlling them by killing them on sight is nearly impossible. I estimate that for every centipede I see (which is usually about 1 every other day, always in the evenings) there are at least 10 or 20 that I don't. And if you and I don't kill them, they're not going anywhere. I have no cat or dog, so the only natural enemy these insects have is ME. Unlike a fly, which basically lives as long as it takes to reproduce, the house centipede has a life-span of up to about 5 years. And it's not like killing them is easy once you find one. Their reaction time and senses are very good--they have compound eyes, and can see you approaching (ever try to sway a fly with your hand?) They have 15 pair of legs (one pair per body segment), and the ability to lock their long bodies rigid, so that they don't drag on the walking--no, running--surface. I've been told that one way to stop them is to spray them with some sort of aerosol. Don't be tempted to do what I did, however, and spray the aerosol can over a lighter. I can satisfy your curiosity about 2 things. First, the bug will get out of the way before you hit it with the flame. Second, your flammable drapes will not move out of the way before they catch fire. And when you do successfully squash one, you will be rather unhappy with the huge brown stain that it leaves on your wall. Sometimes they leave a few legs behind, too, which just makes you feel bad for them. Perhaps the only thing about these beasts that makes them less awful than cockroaches (aside from the fact that having them in your apartment is not a sign of scuzziness) is that the females only carry one egg at a time, so there is no danger of reinfesting an entire area by killing just one.
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Thanks to David Kadavy for sending me this disgusting photo (left side--click to enlarge). Thanks to Spam Man for the one on the right. | ![]() |
It's been a year now since we've met, and my sick fascination with house centipedes has led to this website, which I am hoping will cure my terrible fear of them. Every time I see one of these things, I get a shiver up and down my spine. And it doesn't get any better with time. Unlike most monsters, centipedes don't care if the covers are pulled over your head. They'll still jump off the ceiling or wall and land in your bed. If you'll believe it, even looking at the pictures I have here makes me kind of queasy. I had this talk with my roommate once where I wondered aloud as to how many were actually in my apartment at any given time. I thought at that point about what it would look like if I could just take all of the centipedes in my home and put them together in a jar. Would there be 2? 20? 500? This is something that frankly gives me the heebie jeebies worse than picturing a sweaty Roseanne sunbathing nude.
Eating habits
Living Space
Why Scutigera-Coleoptrata is a remarkable creature
Controlling Scutigera-Coleoptrata
They'll be watching you too.
Please, email me your stories
or
comments or questions about scutigera-coleoptrata. I love knowing
there are other people suffering out there with me.
Note--this counter
is completely separate from the one on my front
page. I have reason to measure this page alone.