Most millipedes are not good and caring parents.
They just drop their eggs on the ground and abandon them.
But some of them spin a protective silken cocoon around their egg mass or dig an underground chamber in which they hide their eggs.
A few species of millipedes are attentive parents that care for their offspring much as birds care for their eggs and nestlings.
The females prepare an underground nest in which they lay their eggs, brood the eggs until they hatch, and then guard their young until they are capable of surviving on their own.
