You know those odd sounds you hear in the middle of the night?
The sound was coming from under
some papers which I lifted, expecting to see the mouse scamper away," the
32-year-old psychotherapist said Wednesday.
LONDON - Aaron Balick expected to find a
tiny mouse rustling behind the TV in his apartment. Instead, he found a venomous
giant centipede that somehow hitched a ride from South America to
Britain.
"Thinking it was a mouse, I went to
investigate the sound. The sound was coming from under some papers which I
lifted, expecting to see the mouse scamper away," the 32-year-old
psychotherapist said Wednesday. "Instead, when I lifted the papers, I saw this
prehistoric looking animal skitter away behind a stack of books."
He trapped the 9-inch-long creature between a
stack of books and put it in a plastic container.
The next day he took it to Britain's Natural
History Museum, which identified the insect as a Scolopendra gigantea —
the world's biggest species of
centipede.
Stuart Hine, an entomologist at the museum,
said it was likely the centipede hitched a ride aboard a freighter, likely with
a shipment of fruit.
"Dealing with over 4,000 public and
commercial inquiries every year, we have come to expect the unexpected. However,
when Aaron produced this beast from his bag I was staggered," Hine said. "Not
even I expected to be presented with this."
The Scolopendra gigantea has front claws that
are adapted to deliver venom when it stings, which can lead to a blistering
rash, nausea and fever. The sting is rarely life-threatening, but
painful.
Posted: Wed - August 31, 2005 at 10:02 PM