List of woodlice of the British Isles

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Woodlice are the most species-rich group of terrestrial crustaceans.[1] Of the 4,000 described species found worldwide,[2] 35 species in 10 families are native to the British Isles. One of these species, Acaeroplastes melanurus, had been considered extinct in the British Isles but was rediscovered in 2002 at its only site (Howth, County Dublin, Ireland), and a further ten species have become naturalised in greenhouses, presumably transported with exotic plants.[3] Five species are especially common throughout the British Isles, and are known as the "famous five species".[4] They are Oniscus asellus (the common shiny woodlouse), Porcellio scaber (the common rough woodlouse), Philoscia muscorum (the common striped woodlouse), Trichoniscus pusillus (the common pygmy woodlouse) and Armadillidium vulgare (the common pill bug). One species, Metatrichoniscoides celticus, is endemic to Glamorgan, and is listed as a vulnerable species in the IUCN Red List.

Reductoniscus costulatus, Kesselyák, 1930
Reductoniscus costulatus occurs naturally in the Seychelles, on Mauritius, in Malaysia and in the Hawaiian Islands, but has been introduced to several parts of Europe, where it survives in greenhouses.[2]

Armadillidiidae

Armadillidium vulgare
Armadillidium vulgare in the rolled-up defensive posture characteristic of pill bugs
Armadillidium pictum

"Pill bugs" of the family Armadillidiidae are often confused with pill millipedes such as Glomeris marginata, which is also widespread and common in Britain and Ireland, but pill millipedes have two pairs of legs per body segment, while woodlice have only seven pairs of legs.[5] Six certainly native species occur in the British Isles; some doubt exists as to the status of Eluma caelatum.

Armadillidium album, Dollfus, 1887
Armadillidium album is a pale-coloured species, and does not roll itself into a ball when disturbed. Rather, it remains stationary, but with its body slightly arched. It is only found at coastal sites, chiefly in sand dunes, having been first discovered in Britain at the Taw and Torridge estuaries in Devon in 1906.[3] It is found from the Netherlands along the Atlantic coast of Europe to the Mediterranean, where it reaches as far east as Greece.[2]
Armadillidium depressum, Brandt, 1833
Armadillidium depressum is a large pill bug, up to 20 mm (0.79 in) long. Females are somewhat variable in colour, but males are uniformly slate grey. It cannot roll up into a perfect ball, but leaves its antennae and telson exposed.[3] In the British Isles, it is only found in South West England and South Wales, but is also found in Belgium, France and Italy.[2]
Armadillidium nasatum, Budde-Lund, 1885
Like the previous species, Armadillidium nasatum cannot roll up into a perfect ball; it too leaves its antennae and telson exposed.[3] As well as being introduced to North America, it is found natively from Italy and northern Spain to the Netherlands and Britain,[2] where it is widely distributed across the southern half of the country.[3]
Armadillidium pictum, Brandt, 1833
Armadillidium pictum occurs over most of Europe, where it is chiefly a forest species. In the British Isles, it is only known from a few sites, all remote from human habitation, in Cumbria and Powys. It closely resembles A. pulchellum, but it is darker in colour, with less distinct mottling, which is arranged in lines along the length of the body. It is also, at up to 9 mm (0.35 in) long, slightly larger than A. pulchellum.[3]
Armadillidium pulchellum, Zenker, 1798
Armadillidium pulchellum may reach 6 mm (0.24 in) in length, and is covered with mosaic patterns of black, white, orange and red. The British Isles hold the greatest concentration of sites for this species,[3] which also extends across Northern and Western Europe.[2] In Great Britain, it is found on coastal cliffs and in upland areas, being particularly associated with Thymus spp.; in Ireland, its ecological tendencies are different, often being found in calcareous glacial sites, particularly eskers.[3]
Armadillidium vulgare, Latreille, 1804
Armadillidium vulgare is the most common and thus the most well known of the pill bugs. It grows up to 14 mm (0.55 in) long, and is a uniform grey colour.[6] Its abundance tails off to the north and west, and is not known to occur north of a line between the estuaries of the River Clyde and the River Tay in Scotland, or north-west of a line between Galway and Lough Foyle in Ireland. It is associated with sand dunes in the more north-westerly parts of its range, but is often replaced on Carboniferous limestone by the related species Armadillidium pulchellum. Beyond Britain, it is found throughout Europe and parts of Asia, and has been introduced to North America, Australia, South Africa and some islands in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.[3]
Eluma caelata, Miers, 1877
Eluma caelata (previously Eluma purpurascens)[2] is typically 10 mm (0.39 in), but exceptionally up to 15 mm (0.59 in) long. The body is purplish brown, with a pair of single large, black ocelli and a triangular telson. It is abundant on cliffs on Ireland's east coast, although it is also found beside railway lines away from the sea, suggesting it was introduced with railway ballast. In 1975, the species was discovered for the first time in Great Britain, and was originally known from two sites: Overstrand, Norfolk and near Herne Bay, Kent, both sites being coastal cliffs of soft rock.[3] It is now known to occur at numerous locations in south-east England (mainly Kent and Essex) including several non-coastal, man-made habitats.[7] It is found outside the British Isles on Atlantic coasts south to north-western Africa, as well as the Canary Islands, Azores and Madeira. It has been introduced to Tasmania and to French Guiana, from where the type specimen hails.[2]

Cylisticidae

Cylisticus convexus, De Geer, 1778
Cylisticus convexus, the "curly woodlouse", has a scattered distribution across the British Isles. It seems to occur either in coastal sites, or synanthropically in anthropogenic habitats. It has been introduced to sites across the New World, from Canada to Argentina.[3]

Halophilosciidae

Haplophilosciidae is a family of woodlice lacking pleopodal lungs. Its members are therefore restricted to coastal habitats.[8]

Halophiloscia couchii, Kinahan, 1858
Haplophiloscia couchii is a coastal species which is almost never seen in daylight.[3] It was originally described from Talland Bay, Cornwall, but is found as far south as Dakar (Senegal) and has also been introduced to North America, South America and Australia.
Stenophiloscia glarearum, Verhoeff, 1908
Stenophiloscia glarearum (formerly S. zosterae)[2] is less than 6 mm (0.24 in) long and white, with a distinctly spiny dorsal surface. In the British Isles, it is only known from three sites: Slapton Ley, Scolt Head Island and Goldhanger, Essex.[3] Outside Britain, the species is only known from the Canary Islands and Mediterranean coasts from Spain to Malta and Greece.[2]

Ligiidae

Ligia oceanica at Portishead, Somerset
Ligia oceanica, Linnaeus, 1767
Ligia oceanica, the sea slater, is the largest of the British woodlice, reaching a length of up to 30 mm (1.2 in). It is found on rocky shores throughout the British Isles. Its wider range extends from Norway to Morocco, and has since been introduced to North America.[3]
Ligidium hypnorum, Cuvier, 1792
In the British Isles, Ligidium hypnorum is restricted to the south and east of England, being particularly frequent in Kent and Surrey, but with further populations in East Anglia, western Gloucestershire and North Somerset. It grows up to 9 mm (0.4 in) and is dark and shiny in appearance. It is found mainly in deciduous woodland, especially ancient woodland, and in fens. Outside Britain, it is distributed across Central Europe as far east as the Black Sea.[3]

Oniscidae

Oniscus asellus
Oniscus asellus, Linnaeus, 1758
Oniscus asellus, the "common shiny woodlouse", is the most widespread species of woodlouse in the British Isles, both geographically and ecologically.[3] It is not known from the Mediterranean Basin, but is widespread in Northern and Western Europe, as far east as Ukraine, as well as in the Azores and Madeira; it has also been widely introduced in the Americas.[2] It is one of the largest native woodlice in Britain, at up to 16 mm (0.63 in) long.[9] It is relatively flat, and is a shiny patchy grey in colour.[3]

Philosciidae

Philoscia muscorum
Burmoniscus meeusei, Holthuis, 1947
Originally described under the name Chaetophiloscia meeusei from greenhouses at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew,[3] Burmoniscus meeusei is now known to occur in the wild in Brazil, Hawaii and Taiwan.[2] It is not native to the British Isles.
Philoscia muscorum, Scopoli, 1763
Philoscia muscorum, the "common striped woodlouse" or "fast woodlouse", is up to 11 mm (0.43 in) long, with a greyish-brown, mottled, shiny body,[10] and long legs, which allow it to move quickly. It is more common in the south of the British Isles, but can be found up to the north coast of Scotland.[3]
Setaphora patiencei, Bagnall, 1908
Although the generic placement of this species is uncertain, it is known to occur in the wild in Mauritius and Réunion, and is now established in greenhouses in England.[2] It is not native to the British Isles.

Porcellionidae

Porcellio scaber
Porcellio dilatatus
Porcellio spinicornis
Acaeroplastes melanurus, Budde-Lund, 1885
Acaeroplastes melanurus is known from much of southern Europe, from Croatia to Spain and the Azores, and including Algeria.[2] In the British Isles, it is only known from cliffs at Howth, County Dublin, where it was found several times between 1909 and 1934.[3] The species was rediscovered in 2002,[11] and further study showed that a substantial population still exists.[12]
Agabiformius lentus, Budde-Lund, 1885
Agabiformius lentus is native to the Mediterranean region, but has been widely introduced outside that range.
Porcellio dilatatus, Brandt, 1833
Porcellio dilatatus is a widespread species, although only abundant at a few restricted sites. It is large and wide, with a rounded tip to the telson in adults.[3]
Porcellio laevis, Latreille, 1804
Porcellio laevis is, when fully grown, the largest of the Porcellio species in the British Isles, at up to 18 mm (0.71 in) long.[6] It may be in decline due to the reduced availability of its preferred habitat; it was formerly common around horse dung.[3] It is more common in warmer climates, and is found across Europe and North Africa, as well as having been introduced to many other parts of the world.[2]
Porcellio scaber, Latreille, 1804
Porcellio scaber, the "common rough woodlouse", is one of the most frequent woodlice in the British Isles. It is also one of the best colonisers, having become established from Iceland to South America and South Africa.[3] Adults may reach 11 mm (0.43 in) long.[6]
Porcellio spinicornis, Say, 1818
Porcellio spinicornis is confined to stone walls and buildings, with a tendency to avoid areas with a strong Atlantic climatic influence. It is distinctively marked, with two rows of yellow marks along the body against a brown background with a darker median stripe and a blackish head. Its wider distribution covers much of Europe, but little of the Mediterranean region, eastwards to Ukraine; it has also been introduced to Canada and the United States.[3]
Porcellionides cingendus, Kinahan, 1857
Porcellionides cingendus has an Atlantic, or Lusitanian distribution, stretching from Portugal to the British Isles,[2] and reaching its northernmost location at St. John's Point, (near Killough) County Down. It partly replaces Philoscia muscorum where it occurs, and the two are easily confused in the field; Porcellionides cingendus, however, is narrower, and has a matt, not shiny, body.[3]
Porcellionides pruinosus, Brandt, 1833
Porcellionides pruinosus is quite different from P. cingendus and the two are unlikely to be confused in the field. P. pruinosus has a characteristic dusty bloom and very pale legs. Although there is some doubt as to its native status in Britain, P. pruinosus has been found in Roman remains in London, indicating that if it was introduced, it was not introduced recently.[3] The species is predominantly Mediterranean in its distribution, but has taken on a cosmopolitan distribution through the actions of man.[2]

Platyarthridae

Platyarthrus hoffmannseggi
Platyarthrus hoffmannseggii, Brandt, 1833
Platyarthrus hoffmannseggii is closely associated with ants' nests, particularly those of Lasius flavus, Lasius niger and species of Myrmica. It has a distinctive oval shape and short antennae. Its distribution appears to follow those of the ants with which it lives, and the British Isles are the north-westerly limit of its range. Elsewhere, P. hoffmannseggii extends south to the Mediterranean.[3] It is found outside Europe in North Africa and Turkey, and has been introduced to North America.[2]
Trichorhina tomentosa, Budde-Lund, 1893
Trichorhina tomentosa is the only species of woodlouse originating in the Americas to have become established in the British Isles, where it survives in greenhouses.[2]

Styloniscidae

Cordioniscus stebbingi, Patience, 1907
The native range of Cordioniscus stebbingi is restricted to eastern Spain. It has, however, been introduced to greenhouses worldwide.[2]
Styloniscus spinosus, Patience, 1907
Styloniscus spinosus is native to Mauritius, Réunion, Madagascar and Hawaii, but is found in some greenhouses in Great Britain.[2]

Trachelipodidae

Trichoniscidae

References

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