TULUS. 
5 11 
Genus XIII. — Stilus* 
This tribe fo nearly refembles tbe former, that in the 
Fauna Swecica they are both included under one genus. 
The feet of the tuli are ftill more numerous than thofe of 
the fcolopendra, being, on each fide, twice as many as the 
fegments of the body. The antennae are moniliform, the 
palpi articulated, and the body of a femicylindrical form. 
Tulus Jabulafus *. This fpecies has no lei's than two 
hundred and forty feet, although its length is not more 
than an inch. It is of an afii-colour, and miooth ; the 
body compofed of fixty fegments, each giving o.T two 
pair of fmall white feet. 1 lie antennae of this infect are 
Ihort, and confid of five rings. When the animal is 
touched, it wraps itfelf up into a round ball, the feet all 
turned inward. 
Milleptda orientals f. This is the larged of all the 
tuli, being as long and as thick as a man’s finger : The 
head is fmall, and obtul'c, the antennae clavated, and the 
eyes black ; the body is of a pale colour, and divided, 
in forty-three fegments, each having a pair of feet on 
every fide, the whole amounting to an hundred and fe- 
venty-two J. 
* Railnf. p.47. f Seta, I. p. 13 r. 
$ Regne'Anim. p. 2 53. fp. 3. 
Printed by £ 
Mur.dtil and Son. 3 
THE END. 
