Red Ring Millipede (Centrobolus Annulatus)
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Red Ring Millipede (Centrobolus Annulatus)

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Description

Red Ring Millipede (Centrobolus Annulatus)The Red Ring Millipede is one of the more visually striking smaller millipedes available in the UK hobby a compact South African species in the well known "red millipede" genus Centrobolus, with vivid red orange and dark banded segmentation that genuinely lives up to the photos. Combined with arboreal (climbing) behaviour rather than the burrowing tendencies of most hobby millipedes, this is a properly distinctive species with real display value

The Red Ring Millipede is one of the more visually striking smaller millipedes available in the UK hobby — a compact South African species in the well-known "red millipede" genus Centrobolus, with vivid red-orange and dark banded segmentation that genuinely lives up to the photos. Combined with arboreal (climbing) behaviour rather than the burrowing tendencies of most hobby millipedes, this is a properly distinctive species with real display value despite its modest size. Adults reach 70–100 mm — much smaller than the famous African Giants, but the bright colouration and surface-active behaviour deliver visual appeal that the larger species's predominantly subterranean lifestyle can't match.

This is part of our wider millipede collection and represents the only Centrobolus species we currently stock — the genus contains around 35 described species, all endemic to southern Africa, with the broader red-banded aesthetic shared across the genus. For collectors building a properly varied millipede display, the Red Ring sits in a useful niche: smaller and more sensitive than our Burmese Beauty Millipede or African Giants, but visually distinctive in ways the larger species simply aren't. Pairs naturally with smaller-and-pretty hobby millipedes like our Hawaiian Glow Millipede and Ivory Millipede for keepers building a focused "smaller ornamental millipede" cluster rather than chasing pure size.

One honest framing point up front. Centrobolus species don't have the bombproof reputation of African Giants or the larger Spirostreptus species. They're more sensitive to overheating, more dependent on consistent humidity, and have a generally shorter captive track record. They're not difficult to keep — but they're not "set and forget" animals either. If you've succeeded with Giants and are looking for a smaller, more colourful step up in care attention, this is the right species. If you're brand new to millipedes, consider the easier larger species first. To set things up properly from the start, browse our accessories collection for substrate components, leaf litter, and other items this species depends on.

Quick Care Summary

  • Scientific Name: Centrobolus anulatus (Attems, 1934) — note the proper spelling has ONE 'n' in "anulatus" per the original 1934 description and authoritative sources (SANBI, iNaturalist, peer-reviewed literature). The hobby has widely propagated the incorrect double-N spelling "annulatus."
  • Common Names: Red Ring Millipede, Ringed Red Millipede (SANBI's official English name), Mozambique Fire Millipede, Red Fire Millipede, Red Coral Millipede; shongololo (isiZulu/isiXhosa); mogokolodi (Sepedi); khongoloti (Xitsonga)
  • Family: Pachybolidae (subfamily Trigoniulinae); order Spirobolida
  • Genus context: Centrobolus contains around 35 described species, all native to southern Africa. The genus is well-studied for unusual sexual biology — reversed sexual size dimorphism (females larger than males) and prolonged copulation behaviour
  • Origin: KwaZulu-Natal province, South Africa — the species is documented from coastal and inland forest habitats in this region. The "Mozambique" common-name connection refers to the broader Centrobolus genus range (which extends north to Beira) rather than to this specific species
  • Adult Size: 70–100 mm — a compact species; females larger than males (unusual for many millipedes)
  • Lifespan: Shorter than African Giants — typically 2–3 years in good captive conditions, though some keepers report longer
  • Difficulty: Medium — more sensitive than African Giant species but manageable with proper conditions
  • Temperature: 18–24 °C (UK room temperature ideal). No supplementary heat required. Overheating is a genuine risk — this species prefers cooler conditions than most tropical millipedes
  • Humidity: 70–80% — properly high. Substrate kept moist to the touch throughout
  • Ventilation: Cross-ventilation important — prevents mould and stagnant air despite the high humidity requirement
  • Climbing: Arboreal — properly active climbers; documented as a surface-active species in field studies, prefers climbing branches and cork bark to burrowing
  • Activity: Often active during the day (unusual for millipedes); will surface to feed and explore rather than hiding constantly
  • Appearance: Bright red-orange base colouration with dark transverse bands creating the "ring" appearance that gives the species its name. Body cylindrical with the smooth segmented appearance typical of Spirobolida species
  • Sexual dimorphism: Reversed — females are larger and broader than males. Males identifiable by modified legs (gonopods) on the 7th body segment; both pairs of legs on that segment are modified, characteristic of order Spirobolida
  • Defensive secretion: Mild defensive liquid when threatened — stains skin temporarily but isn't dangerous; wash hands after handling
  • Social structure: Communal — can be kept in groups without issues
  • Rarity: Uncommon in UK hobby — periodically available rather than constantly stocked

What Makes the Red Ring Millipede Special

The colour is genuinely the species's strongest feature. Few hobby millipedes show such intense red-orange colouration; the dark transverse bands create the "ring" appearance that gives the species both its scientific name (anulatus meaning "ringed") and its various common names. Adult specimens are properly photogenic in a way that the larger but darker African Giants simply aren't. For display-focused keepers who prioritise visual appeal over size, this is one of the right species.

The arboreal lifestyle is unusual for the hobby. Most popular hobby millipedes — Giants, Burmese Beauties, Ivory Millipedes — are primarily fossorial (burrowing). The Red Ring is documented in field studies as surface-active and arboreal, climbing branches and cork bark rather than spending its time buried in substrate. This means you actually see them. For a hobby where many species are essentially invisible most of the time, the Red Ring's habit of climbing visible structures is a properly meaningful display advantage.

The Centrobolus biology is interesting. The genus is well-studied scientifically for two unusual features: reversed sexual size dimorphism (females are larger than males, opposite of the usual mammalian pattern most people are familiar with), and prolonged copulation durations. Research papers across multiple Centrobolus species document mating events lasting hours, sometimes with male mate-guarding behaviour persisting afterwards. For keepers interested in observable biology beyond just keeping animals alive, the genus offers genuine behavioural content.

The day-active behaviour. Unlike most hobby millipedes (which are predominantly nocturnal), Red Ring Millipedes are frequently active during daylight hours. Combined with the climbing behaviour, this means daytime observation is properly possible rather than requiring late-night enclosure checks to see anything. For keepers who want to actually observe their animals during normal hours, this matters.

The Centrobolus conservation context. Around 12 of the 35 Centrobolus species are formally assessed as threatened (9 vulnerable, 3 endangered) due to habitat loss in southern African forests — these are properly habitat-restricted animals. C. anulatus itself isn't currently listed as threatened (it's reasonably widespread in KwaZulu-Natal forests), but the broader genus context is worth knowing. Captive-bred hobby populations of Centrobolus species represent a meaningful conservation-adjacent activity — keepers are essentially maintaining genetic reservoirs of animals whose wild populations face real pressures.

The smaller-millipede cluster. Within our millipede collection, the Red Ring fits alongside the Hawaiian Glow Millipede (similar size, similar climbing tendency, similar "smaller and visually distinctive" profile) and our Ivory Millipede (slightly smaller, similar Spirobolida lineage). For keepers building a focused collection of smaller ornamental millipedes rather than chasing maximum size, these three species together provide properly varied visual character at manageable scale.

About the Name and Spelling

This species has more naming complexity than most.

  • Centrobolus anulatus: Described by Carl Attems in 1934. The species epithet "anulatus" derives from Latin anulus (meaning "ring") and refers to the transversely ringed appearance of the body segmentation. The original 1934 description used the single-N spelling, which has nomenclatural priority and is used by authoritative sources including the South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) and iNaturalist.
  • The "annulatus" double-N spelling: Widely propagated in hobby trade contexts but technically incorrect per the original description. We've kept this URL using the hobby spelling for SEO continuity, but the scientifically correct form is anulatus with one N.
  • Genus Centrobolus: Established by Cook in 1897 for a group of African red-coloured spirobolidan millipedes. The genus is part of the broader Pachybolidae family.
  • Common name variants:
    • Red Ring Millipede / Ringed Red Millipede — SANBI's official English name; matches the etymology of "anulatus"
    • Red Fire Millipede — common hobby trade name referencing the colouration
    • Mozambique Fire Millipede — sometimes used but potentially misleading; while the Centrobolus genus does extend into Mozambique, C. anulatus specifically is a KwaZulu-Natal species not typically associated with Mozambique. The name probably propagated from early hobby imports being labelled by exporting country
    • Red Coral Millipede — alternative hobby name; less commonly used
    • Shongololo — the general isiZulu/isiXhosa word for millipede, applied to this species in southern African vernacular
  • Family: Pachybolidae (sometimes alternatively classified in Trigoniulidae depending on source). Both names refer to the same family-level group; the classification reflects ongoing taxonomic refinement rather than disagreement about which organism is involved.
  • Order Spirobolida feature: Both pairs of legs on the seventh segment of the male are modified into gonopods (reproductive structures), which is a defining feature of the order. This is properly important for distinguishing males in identification.

Setting Up the Enclosure

A 30 × 30 × 30 cm enclosure works as a baseline for 1–5 Red Ring Millipedes; scale up proportionally for larger groups. Both glass and plastic enclosures work; the priority is good cross-ventilation while maintaining humidity. Containers wider than tall give the animals room to climb and explore — height matters because this is an arboreal species, but width still matters for floor activity.

Escape-proofing matters more than people expect for millipedes. The existing copy is right that these are surprisingly strong for their size — they can lift loosely-fitted lids and squeeze through small gaps. Use clip-locked or properly weighted lids; check for gaps regularly.

Provide proper climbing structure. This is the most important display setup feature for this species:

  • Thick branches positioned vertically and at angles
  • Cork bark slabs in vertical orientation
  • Multiple climbing surfaces at different heights
  • Some horizontal cork or wood pieces as resting platforms

The animals will use these properly — climbing isn't optional behaviour for this species. Browse our accessories range for cork bark and natural climbing options.

Ventilation matters genuinely. The species needs high humidity but stagnant moist conditions encourage mould, which is bad for both the animals and the enclosure. Cross-ventilation through opposing mesh-covered openings provides the right balance. Don't seal the enclosure for "maximum humidity" — that produces stagnant air and mould problems.

Important husbandry note: Skip the deep water dish. The high substrate moisture provides hydration; standing water can encourage drowning incidents and excessive humidity. A shallow water-soaked sponge or pebble-lined water surface works for animals that want to drink.

Substrate

Substrate is properly the most important food source for any millipede — the animals genuinely eat the substrate as a primary diet. The right mix:

  • Coconut fibre (coir) as the moisture-retaining foundation
  • Organic compost (pesticide-free) mixed throughout for nutritional content
  • Decaying hardwood pieces — beech, oak, magnolia — mixed in and on top. Genuine food source as much as cover
  • Generous layer of hardwood leaf litter on top — properly important for both food and surface cover. Browse our accessories collection for ready-prepared leaf litter
  • Springtails inoculated to consume excess moisture and prevent mould
  • Calcium sources — cuttlebone, crushed eggshell, limestone chips. Properly important for healthy moulting. Our calcium options cover the full range

Substrate depth should be 8–10 cm minimum. Although this species is arboreal, substrate quality still matters because it's the dietary foundation and provides moisture buffer for the enclosure as a whole.

Keep the substrate consistently moist to the touch — not waterlogged, not dry. The 70–80% humidity preference comes substantially from substrate moisture rather than air humidity per se; the substrate is essentially the species's life support system.

Humidity and Temperature

Maintain high humidity (70–80%) primarily through substrate moisture rather than misting. Light misting once or twice weekly maintains surface dampness; the substrate itself should hold moisture between mistings. Don't oversaturate — waterlogged substrate causes mould and can drown animals.

Temperature should be UK room temperature — 18–24 °C. This is genuinely the right range; supplementary heating is not just unnecessary but potentially actively harmful. Field reports and hobby experience both note that C. anulatus doesn't tolerate heat mats well and prefers cool, stable temperatures. Overheating is one of the more common causes of Centrobolus mortality in inexperienced keepers' enclosures.

Through UK winters, temperatures down to 15–16 °C are tolerable though activity will reduce. Through UK summers, monitor for heat stress — keep the enclosure away from direct sunlight, south-facing windows, or heat sources. Cool, stable, properly damp is the goal.

Diet

Red Ring Millipedes are detritivores with the typical millipede dietary profile. The substrate and leaf litter form the dietary foundation; fresh foods provide variety and moisture:

  • Hardwood leaf litter and decaying wood — properly the primary food source. Should always be available. Oak particularly well-received per hobby reports. Browse our accessories collection for ready-prepared options
  • Fresh fruit and vegetables (best when slightly decomposed) — cucumber, melon, banana, apple, ripe peach. Cucumber is particularly well-received per multiple hobby reports. Hobby keepers note this species prefers fruit/veg that's reached the soft, decomposing stage rather than fresh-cut
  • Cooked sweetcorn — a hobby staple for millipedes; well-received
  • Other soft vegetables — courgette, sweet potato (cooked or raw)
  • Calcium sources — cuttlebone, crushed eggshell, limestone. Properly essential for healthy moulting and exoskeleton development. Always available
  • Protein supplements occasionally — fish flakes, dog/cat kibble in small amounts. Most of the protein comes from the substrate microbial community

Avoid citrus (potentially harmful), strongly aromatic vegetables (onion, garlic), and heavily processed human foods. Remove uneaten fresh food within 48 hours to prevent mould in the warm, humid setup.

Breeding

Red Ring Millipedes will breed in captivity given proper conditions, though they're not as prolific as the larger African species. Males can be identified by the gonopods (modified legs) on the 7th body segment; females lack these. Females are larger than males (reversed sexual size dimorphism characteristic of the genus).

The breeding sequence:

  • Males pursue females; copulation is properly prolonged for the genus (potentially hours)
  • Mate-guarding behaviour may occur after copulation
  • Females deposit eggs in moist substrate, typically a few centimetres deep
  • Eggs hatch after approximately 6 weeks at typical room temperatures
  • Newly hatched young are pale (often whitish or cream-coloured) without the red-orange adult colouration
  • The characteristic ring colouration develops gradually through successive moults — properly takes several months
  • Juveniles should remain with the adults — the young feed on adult frass (droppings), which transfers essential gut bacteria for cellulose digestion

For breeding success:

  • Communal group of at least 3–5 animals, ideally with both sexes
  • Stable conditions — temperature, humidity, food availability
  • Adequate substrate depth (8–10 cm) for egg deposition
  • Continuous leaf litter and decaying wood — supports both adult and juvenile feeding
  • Calcium consistently available — affects egg shell quality and juvenile moult success
  • Patience — the slow juvenile development means visible recruitment takes 6–12 months from initial breeding

Handling

Red Ring Millipedes are docile and handleable, though not particularly enthusiastic about it. They'll generally just trundle slowly across your hands rather than attempt escape. Like all millipedes, they can secrete a mild defensive liquid (benzoquinones) when threatened — this can temporarily stain skin and may cause mild irritation in sensitive individuals. Wash hands thoroughly after handling.

Don't handle excessively. The defensive secretion costs the animal energy to produce; repeated stress also affects feeding and breeding behaviour. Handle when you genuinely want to observe up close rather than as constant interaction.

Keep handling sessions short and over soft surfaces — a 70–100 mm millipede falling from height can suffer fatal damage to its exoskeleton.

Who Should Buy Red Ring Millipedes?

Ideal for:

  • Display-focused keepers prioritising visual appeal over size
  • Keepers who want surface-active rather than constantly hidden animals
  • Experienced millipede keepers stepping into the more demanding Centrobolus genus
  • Collectors building a focused "smaller ornamental millipede" cluster alongside Hawaiian Glow Millipedes and Ivory Millipedes
  • Anyone interested in observable invertebrate biology — the climbing, day-activity, and prolonged copulation are genuinely interesting
  • Bioactive vivarium setups where the climbing behaviour adds vertical interest beyond burrowing detritivores
  • Keepers with cooler-than-tropical home conditions — the room-temperature preference suits typical UK homes

Not ideal for:

  • Complete beginners to millipede keeping — try a bombproof African Giant first
  • Setups requiring supplementary heating — overheating is genuinely a risk for this species
  • Keepers who can't maintain consistent substrate moisture
  • Anyone wanting maximum size impact — Red Rings are properly compact
  • Tropical-style setups where temperature exceeds 25 °C regularly

Realistic Expectations

Centrobolus doesn't have the bombproof reputation of African Giants. The existing description's honest framing is correct — this species and its genus relatives have a generally shorter captive track record than the larger Spirostreptus and Archispirostreptus species. Some keepers report short lifespans; some report animals that decline mysteriously after months of apparently good husbandry. They're not difficult to keep, but they're not forgiving of mistakes the way Giants are.

Overheating is genuinely the biggest risk. Multiple hobby sources and keepers report that C. anulatus doesn't tolerate heat mats or supplementary heating well. The species's KwaZulu-Natal forest habitat is genuinely cooler than the tropical conditions most hobbyists assume "exotic" invertebrates need. UK room temperature is properly the right range; aim for the cooler half (18–22 °C) rather than pushing toward 25 °C+.

The species name "annulatus" is widely propagated but incorrect. Most hobby retailers (including this listing currently) spell it with two N's. The scientifically correct form is anulatus with one N per the original 1934 Attems description and authoritative sources including SANBI and iNaturalist. If you're researching care online, search both spellings to find the full literature — peer-reviewed sources use "anulatus."

The "Mozambique" common name may overstate Mozambique association. C. anulatus specifically is a KwaZulu-Natal South African species. The broader Centrobolus genus does extend into Mozambique (other species in the genus), but conflating "Mozambique Fire Millipede" with "Mozambique origin" for this specific species is potentially misleading. Your stock almost certainly traces back to South African breeding lines rather than Mozambican imports.

The colour transformation takes time. Newly hatched young are pale and unimpressive — properly small, whitish, lacking the dramatic red-orange colouration. The adult colouration develops through several moults across the juvenile period (months). Don't expect dramatic visual appeal from juveniles; do expect properly striking adults eventually.

They prefer decomposed food. Hobby reports consistently note that C. anulatus won't readily eat fresh-cut fruit or vegetables — they prefer food that's reached the soft, slightly decomposing stage. Offering fresh-cut and leaving it for a day or two before expecting interest is the right approach.

Females are larger than males. The reversed sexual size dimorphism that characterises Centrobolus means females are properly larger and broader than males. In mixed-sex groups, the size difference is genuinely noticeable. This is the opposite of what most people expect from familiar animals.

The defensive secretion stains. The benzoquinones in the defensive secretion are mostly harmless to skin but can leave temporary brownish-orange stains. Wash hands thoroughly after handling; don't handle just before tasks where stained fingers would be a problem. Some people are mildly sensitive to the secretion and may experience minor irritation — discontinue handling if any reaction develops.

UK escape isn't an environmental risk. As with the other tropical and subtropical millipedes in our catalogue, UK outdoor conditions are too cool and dry for C. anulatus to establish in the wild. Recapture escapees promptly but don't worry about establishing feral populations.

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