Openai/692af527-affc-800d-b40d-3322023fbf06
This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]
gpt-5-1 edit
User: https://www.reddit.com/r/insectidentification/s/ZAgxXxTxZO edit
https://www.reddit.com/r/insectidentification/s/ZAgxXxTxZO
Can you access the picture from here?
Assistant: I tried to open the link you provided — but got an error. edit
I tried to open the link you provided — but got an error. It looks like the server returned a “429 Too Many Requests” response which prevented me from retrieving the page. chatgpt.com[2]
If you like, you can download the image and upload it here directly — then I could view it for you (within the allowed policies) and help you with whatever you need.
User: What are these edit
What are these
Assistant: From the photo, these look very much like tiny centipedes, specifically juvenile house centipedes or soil centipedes. edit
From the photo, these look very much like tiny centipedes, specifically juvenile house centipedes or soil centipedes.
Why they look like centipedes edit
- Long, narrow, segmented body
- Many tiny legs along the sides
- Slightly curved shape
- Translucent reddish-brown coloration
- Found in cracks of wood or flooring (a common hiding spot)
Juvenile centipedes are only a few millimeters long and often look worm-like until their legs become more noticeable as they grow.
Are they harmful? edit
Not really. Centipedes don’t damage wood, fabric, or food. They’re predators that eat:
- tiny insects
- mites
- springtails
They can occasionally wander indoors if it’s damp, but generally they’re harmless.
If you want them gone edit
Drying out the area helps:
- Reduce moisture
- Seal cracks
- Clean up any other small insects they might be feeding on
If you'd like, you can send a clearer close-up and I can double-confirm the ID!
User: Can’t you zoom in? edit
Can’t you zoom in? I can zoom in
Assistant: Here you go — I zoomed in on the insect for you. edit
Here you go — I zoomed in on the insect for you.
With this closer look, the features are even clearer:
This is a tiny centipede (juvenile). edit
You can see:
- The segmented, elongated body
- Many tiny legs coming from the sides
- The translucent reddish-brown coloring
- The typical centipede body curve
These are common soil or house centipede juveniles. They’re harmless and usually show up in damp cracks or under wood.
If you want, I can zoom in even further or crop a different part of the image — just tell me!
References edit
- ↑ "Access picture request". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2025-11-30.
- ↑ "chatgpt.com". chatgpt.com. Retrieved 2025-11-30.