Discover the rolling mat in your garden

Many rolling species possess secondary defense measures that secrete certain toxins or hydrogen cyanide gas, which can burn skin and eyes ...

Many rolling species possess secondary defense measures that secrete certain toxins or hydrogen cyanide gas, which can burn skin and eyes .

The projector has lots of legs. Except for head and foot burning and 2-4 burning per burning, there are 1 pair of legs, each with 2 legs.

Picture 1 of Discover the rolling mat in your garden

The projector has lots of legs.

They live in flocks in wet places, in fallen leaves or in gravel piles. Its food consists of fallen leaves, necrotic material, a few that eat young leaves and sweet germs. When eating, they use saliva to moisten and soften the food, then bite chewing with a pair of jaws.

The slide moves slowly, so when in danger, it often curls up to use the hard crust on the back to protect the legs and the vulnerable parts of the body. In addition, on the burn it has a bad gland, which is hard to smell, making it impossible for any animal to touch. Many rolling species possess a secondary defense measure: secrete some toxic or hydrogen cyanide gas through microscopic holes in the aromatic glands along the sides of the body.

Picture 2 of Discover the rolling mat in your garden

The slide moves very slowly.

Some of these toxins are caustic substances and can corrode ant shells as well as many other predatory insects, as well as burn the skin and eyes of larger predators. Each litter shows about 10-300 eggs, depending on the species. Some rolling species abandon eggs on moist soil or organic items, but some other species build nests to protect eggs with dry feces.

Update 17 December 2018
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