What would make you think it's a female based on it's look? Are there different features that each sex exhibits to help with identification? I'd like to know for my own good as well, haha.Simply by the way it "looks", I'd say it's female. There's no certain way of sexing living subspinipes though.
From the centipedes that I've seen that were definite male or female, I'd say there's very slight difference in the head/body segment width ratio. Males have a slightly bigger difference between head and body segment width, whereas it's closer for females. This is only observing the plates from above, so it being fat has nothing to do with it. Basically, females appear thicker. Also, I noticed, as someone else has also pointed out, the males have longer antennae and legs in proportion to their bodies. The differences are very slight. It'd be a guess just looking at one unsexed adult subspinipes, but if you gave me a picture of two of them from a top down view and told me one was a male and one was a female, I'm pretty sure I would identify them correctly.What would make you think it's a female based on it's look? Are there different features that each sex exhibits to help with identification? I'd like to know for my own good as well, haha.
All of my Sc. subspinipes look identical to each other. Well of course aside from color and size that is.
Cool, thanks much for the info. I do appreciate it.From the centipedes that I've seen that were definite male or female, I'd say there's very slight difference in the head/body segment width ratio. Males have a slightly bigger difference between head and body segment width, whereas it's closer for females. This is only observing the plates from above, so it being fat has nothing to do with it. Basically, females appear thicker. Also, I noticed, as someone else has also pointed out, the males have longer antennae and legs in proportion to their bodies. The differences are very slight. It'd be a guess just looking at one unsexed adult subspinipes, but if you gave me a picture of two of them from a top down view and told me one was a male and one was a female, I'm pretty sure I would identify them correctly.
can you take/ post some pictures were it is possible to see this?From the centipedes that I've seen that were definite male or female, I'd say there's very slight difference in the head/body segment width ratio. Males have a slightly bigger difference between head and body segment width, whereas it's closer for females. This is only observing the plates from above, so it being fat has nothing to do with it. Basically, females appear thicker. Also, I noticed, as someone else has also pointed out, the males have longer antennae and legs in proportion to their bodies. The differences are very slight. It'd be a guess just looking at one unsexed adult subspinipes, but if you gave me a picture of two of them from a top down view and told me one was a male and one was a female, I'm pretty sure I would identify them correctly.