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Armadillo Tuberculatus Isopods for Sale

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Description

Armadillo Tuberculatus Isopods for SaleArmadillo tuberculatus is one of the most distinctive dry climate isopods available in the UK hobby a Greek Mediterranean species displaying striking bluish grey colouration covered in the characteristic tubercles (bumps) that give the species its name. The combination of cool slate blue tones with the heavily textured, bumpy carapace creates a genuinely unusual appearance among isopods, almost armoured or reptilian in character. Combined with their

Armadillo tuberculatus is one of the most distinctive dry-climate isopods available in the UK hobby — a Greek Mediterranean species displaying striking bluish-grey colouration covered in the characteristic tubercles (bumps) that give the species its name. The combination of cool slate-blue tones with the heavily textured, bumpy carapace creates a genuinely unusual appearance among isopods, almost armoured or reptilian in character. Combined with their substantial conglobating ability (they roll into tight defensive balls like all Armadillidae) and manageable size, they're a properly attractive display species for keepers who appreciate texture and subtle colour over bold patterns.

This species belongs to the genus Armadillo — the type genus that gives the entire Armadillidae family (and the related Armadillidium) their names. While less commonly kept than Armadillidium morphs, Armadillo tuberculatus offers something genuinely different: a robust dry-climate Mediterranean species with distinctive bumpy texture and slate-blue colouration that stands apart from the spotted and striped Armadillidium that dominate the hobby.

Critical care note worth flagging upfront: despite some sources confusingly describing them otherwise, Armadillo tuberculatus are dry-climate species that need LOW humidity (40–60%) — NOT a moist environment. They originate from dry Greek Mediterranean regions and are genuinely killed by excessive moisture. This is the single most important husbandry point: keep them drier than almost any other isopod you might own. Overwetting is the most common cause of failure with this species.

They're rated Easy difficulty and Uncommon rarity — accessible to keepers willing to provide the unusual dry conditions, but distinctive enough to stand out in a collection. For anyone wanting a genuinely different isopod that breaks from the typical humid-tropical or moderate-Mediterranean pattern, Armadillo tuberculatus deliver.

Quick Care Summary

  • Scientific Name: Armadillo tuberculatus
  • Common Names: Tuberculatus Isopod, Armadillo Tuberculatus, Blue Tuberculatus
  • Family: Armadillidae
  • Genus: Armadillo (the type genus of the family)
  • Origin: Greece — dry Mediterranean regions
  • Adult Size: Up to 15 mm
  • Lifespan: 2–3 years typical
  • Difficulty: Easy — provided the dry conditions are maintained
  • Temperature: 22–28°C (warm Mediterranean preference)
  • Humidity: 40–60% — LOW humidity, dry-climate species (NOT moisture-loving)
  • Ventilation: High — good airflow essential for dry conditions
  • Conglobation: Yes — rolls into a tight defensive ball
  • Behaviour: Burrowers, prefer dry conditions, moderate activity
  • Breeding: Slower than typical Armadillidium — patient establishment, then steady growth

What Makes Armadillo tuberculatus Special

Several factors have made A. tuberculatus one of the more distinctive dry-climate isopods in the UK hobby:

The bluish-grey tuberculate appearance is genuinely unusual. Where most isopods display smooth carapaces or fine texture, A. tuberculatus are covered in pronounced tubercles (bumps) across the body, combined with cool slate-blue to grey-blue colouration. The textured, almost armoured appearance is genuinely distinctive — they look more like miniature armadillos (hence the genus name) than typical pillbugs.

The species name describes the texture. "Tuberculatus" refers to the tubercles — the bumps covering the body. In juveniles, these can appear more spiky or pronounced, developing into the characteristic rounded bumps as the animals mature. The texture combined with the blue-grey tones is the species' main visual appeal.

Colour develops with maturity. Young A. tuberculatus may show less evident blue colouration, with the slate-blue tones deepening and becoming more pronounced as they reach full adulthood. Established adult colonies display the fullest, most attractive colouration — the species genuinely improves in appearance as it matures.

True dry-climate specialist. Most isopods kept in the hobby need moisture to varying degrees. A. tuberculatus is one of relatively few genuinely dry-climate species — making them an interesting choice for keepers wanting to work with arid-adapted invertebrates, or for bioactive setups designed around Mediterranean or semi-desert conditions.

Robust hard exoskeleton. The heavily-calcified, tuberculate exoskeleton provides genuine protection and contributes to the species' distinctive appearance. Combined with their conglobation ability, they're well-defended animals that handle the occasional disturbance well once established.

Genus heritage. Armadillo is the type genus of the entire Armadillidae family — the genus that lent its name to Armadillidium and the broader family. Keeping A. tuberculatus connects you to the foundational lineage of conglobating isopods rather than the more commonly-kept derived genera.

Conglobation. Like all Armadillidae, they roll into tight defensive balls when disturbed — the classic pillbug behaviour. The tuberculate texture remains visible in conglobated form, creating a particularly distinctive defensive display compared to smooth-bodied species.

How Armadillo tuberculatus Compares to Other Isopods

If you're choosing between distinctive or dry-climate isopods, here's how A. tuberculatus fits in:

  • vs Greek Shield (Porcellio werneri): Both are Greek dry-climate species. Greek Shields are flat disc-shaped with white-skirted edges; A. tuberculatus are bumpy and blue-grey with conglobation ability (Porcellio can't roll). Both suit drier setups — choose based on whether you prefer the flat Porcellio shape or the rolling tuberculate Armadillo.
  • vs Zebra Isopods (Armadillidium maculatum): Zebras are smooth-bodied with bold black-and-white striping and need moderate Mediterranean humidity. A. tuberculatus are bumpy, blue-grey, and need genuinely dry conditions. Different texture, colour, and humidity needs entirely.
  • vs Yellow Spanish (Armadillidium granulatum): Granulatum have granulated texture too, but with yellow spotting and moderate humidity needs. A. tuberculatus are more heavily tuberculate, blue-grey, and drier-adapted. Both textured, but different colour and care.
  • vs Magic Potion (Armadillidium vulgare): Magic Potion are smooth with dalmatian speckling and moderate humidity needs. A. tuberculatus offer the bumpy texture and dry-climate specialisation. Different aesthetic and husbandry approach.

Browse the full Armadillo collection for related species in this genus, or the broader isopods collection for comparison.

Critical Setup Requirement — Keep Them DRY

This is the most important husbandry point for Armadillo tuberculatus, and it genuinely runs counter to most isopod-keeping instincts. These are dry-climate Greek Mediterranean species. They need LOW humidity (40–60%) and high ventilation — NOT the moist conditions most isopods require.

Overwetting is the single most common cause of death in this species. Keepers used to tropical Cubaris or even moderate-humidity Armadillidium frequently kill A. tuberculatus by providing too much moisture. The instinct to keep substrate damp is exactly wrong for this species.

The proper approach:

  • Keep most of the enclosure dry — only a small corner should have any moisture
  • High ventilation — genuinely good airflow to keep humidity low and prevent stagnation
  • A single small moist zone — one corner with slightly damp substrate or a small water source for hydration and moulting, while the rest stays genuinely dry
  • Mist sparingly if at all — far less than any other isopod; the dry zone should genuinely be dry

If you've kept other isopods and developed habits around maintaining moisture, you'll need to consciously reverse those instincts for A. tuberculatus. When in doubt, drier is safer than wetter for this species.

Setting Up the Enclosure

A 6–10 litre plastic container or terrarium suits a starter colony. Crucially, prioritise ventilation over humidity retention — the opposite of most isopod setups. Use mesh-covered panels, plenty of ventilation holes, or mesh lid sections to maintain genuine airflow and keep humidity in the 40–60% range. The 3L Braplast tub works for starter colonies if you add generous ventilation.

Keep the enclosure in a warm spot (22–28°C) away from direct sunlight. Their warm dry Mediterranean origins mean they appreciate warmth more than many isopods, but stable conditions matter — avoid extreme fluctuations.

Browse our accessories collection for appropriate enclosures, ventilation, and other essentials.

Substrate

Build a drier substrate appropriate for arid Mediterranean conditions — quite different from typical isopod substrate:

  • Organic topsoil base (pesticide-free)
  • Sand mixed in generously for drainage and authentic dry-Mediterranean texture
  • Minimal sphagnum peat moss (much less than for moisture-loving species)
  • Crushed limestone or eggshells distributed throughout for calcium
  • Decaying hardwood pieces, particularly white-rotted wood

Substrate depth: 5–8 cm for burrowing. A. tuberculatus are burrowers and appreciate depth for security, but the substrate should be predominantly dry rather than damp throughout.

Top layer: Generous dry hardwood leaf litter — magnolia leaves and oak leaves work well. Add multiple cork bark pieces and flat stones for hiding spots and surface refuge. Distribute calcium sources throughout. Keep one small corner slightly moist with a sphagnum patch while the rest stays genuinely dry.

Temperature

22–28°C suits their warm Mediterranean origins. This is slightly warmer than many isopods prefer, reflecting their dry-climate adaptation. UK room temperature works in most heated homes, though they appreciate the warmer end of the range. A low-wattage heat mat on the side (never underneath) connected to a thermostat can help maintain warmth in cooler homes. Avoid sustained extremes in either direction.

Diet

A. tuberculatus are unfussy detritivores, though their dry-climate origins mean they handle drier foods particularly well:

  • Primary diet (always available): Dried hardwood leaf litter (oak preferred), white-rotted wood, dried plant matter, moss
  • Vegetables (1–2x weekly, in dried or small fresh amounts): Carrot, courgette, sweet potato, leafy greens. Given the dry setup, dried vegetable options work particularly well and reduce mould risk. Replace fresh foods within 24 hours.
  • Protein (essential — 1–2x weekly): Fish flakes, dried daphnia, dried shrimp. Browse our accessories collection for the full range of protein supplements.
  • Calcium (essential — always available): Cuttlefish bone, crushed limestone, oyster shell, eggshells. Multiple sources distributed throughout — essential for healthy moulting of the heavily-calcified tuberculate exoskeleton.

Important: dried foods reduce mould risk. In any enclosure, excess fresh food creates mould — but in the warm conditions A. tuberculatus prefer, this happens fast. Favour dried foods, feed small amounts, and remove uneaten fresh items quickly. The dry setup naturally reduces mould compared to humid isopod enclosures, but vigilance still matters.

Breeding

A. tuberculatus breed more slowly than typical Armadillidium species — patience is required. They're not prolific quick-breeders, but established colonies grow steadily over time once they've settled into appropriate dry conditions.

For breeding success:

  • Stable warm temperatures (24–26°C optimal)
  • Genuinely dry conditions (40–60% humidity) with one small moist zone
  • High ventilation
  • Abundant calcium availability throughout
  • Regular protein supplementation
  • Adequate burrowing depth and hiding spots
  • Minimal disturbance during establishment
  • Patience — slower breeding than Armadillidium means colony growth takes time

Realistic timeline: Allow several months for colonies to establish before expecting significant breeding. Once settled and comfortable in proper dry conditions, they reproduce steadily, and established colonies can grow into substantial populations over time. The key is reaching that established state through correct (dry) husbandry.

Pair With Springtails (Carefully)

Springtails can help manage mould in the small moist zone of an A. tuberculatus setup, but use them more sparingly than in humid setups — the predominantly dry conditions don't suit large springtail populations. A modest springtail culture concentrated in the moist corner provides cleanup without requiring the high humidity that springtails typically prefer. In a genuinely dry enclosure, springtails are less essential than they are for tropical species, but they still help around any fresh food.

Who Should Buy Armadillo tuberculatus Isopods?

Ideal for:

  • Keepers wanting a genuinely distinctive bumpy, blue-grey isopod
  • Anyone interested in dry-climate / arid-adapted invertebrates
  • Collectors wanting species from the foundational Armadillo genus
  • Mediterranean or semi-desert bioactive setup builders
  • Keepers who can resist the instinct to over-moisten
  • Display setup enthusiasts wanting unusual texture and subtle colour
  • Those wanting something different from typical Armadillidium morphs

Not ideal for:

  • Keepers used to moist setups who can't adjust to dry husbandry (overwetting kills them)
  • High-humidity tropical bioactive setups (completely wrong conditions)
  • Anyone wanting fast prolific breeding (they're slow breeders)
  • Setups that can't maintain warm temperatures (22–28°C)
  • Beginners who haven't yet learned to read substrate moisture (the dry requirement is unforgiving of mistakes in the wrong direction)

Realistic Expectations

The single most important expectation: keep them DRY. If you take one thing from this listing, it's that A. tuberculatus need genuinely dry conditions unlike almost any other isopod. Keepers who apply standard moist-isopod husbandry will lose their colony to overwetting. When uncertain, err drier.

Colour develops with age. Newly arrived juveniles may show less evident blue colouration than mature adults. Given time in proper dry conditions, the slate-blue tones deepen and the tuberculate texture becomes more pronounced. The fullest colour appears in established adult colonies.

Breeding is slow. Don't expect the rapid colony explosions of common Armadillidium. A. tuberculatus establish and breed at a more measured pace. Patient keepers are rewarded with steady growth over months; impatient keepers may assume something is wrong when the colony is simply breeding at its natural slower rate.

They acclimate over a few weeks. Newly arrived isopods may stay hidden initially while they assess their new environment. This is normal — focus on stable dry conditions and let them settle. As one PostPods customer noted about following the website's care guidance, proper instructions prevent the most common fatal mistake (too much moisture) — the same principle applies directly here.

Building Your Setup

A complete Armadillo tuberculatus setup needs drier substrate components (with sand for drainage), abundant calcium, dried leaf litter, white-rotted wood, excellent ventilation, and protein supplements. Browse our accessories collection for everything you need — well-ventilated enclosures, leaf litter, calcium (cuttlebone, limestone, oyster shell), and protein supplements.

Browse the full Armadillo collection for related species in this genus, or the broader isopods collection for more options across all genera.

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SKU: 54912823229

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Coming off from The Long Halloween, Jeff Loeb and Tim Sale give us the sequel to their popular story tale in which we see Batman go at it with another year long mystery, while also giving us an origin story for the first Robin, Dick Grayson. After reading this book, I have come away having with even more love of the Dark Knight's mythology, while coming to see this as my favorite Batman story that I have read, even if it doesn't stand as well on its own. ON the narrative side of things, Loeb delivers a story fairly similar to the one he gave in The Long Halloween, though I feel this one is a bit more polished than Halloween was. Some have said that the retreading of plot structure have limited the way Loeb's later works are read, but I myself have no problem with it (for the most part), Loeb manages to do enough differently that you don't feel like you're reading the exact same story. The real big negative I'd have to give this graphic novel is that it really doesn't stand as well by itself than if you had read The Long Halloween. While I myself read that story before coming in to this one, I did see many connections that I would assume would through off any newcomers who hadn't read the prior story. But I will say that this is the story that had me invested the most emotionally. Without giving away any spoilers, that last page in the novel gave me such a cathartic experience that I really came to appreciate certain aspects of the Dark Knight's mythology, and how themes of loneliness were touched upon in a very genuine way. Looking at the art for the novel, Sale's work has improved much from The Long Halloween. I always mention in reviews concerning Sale that I was originally not a fan of his art, but after going through his work, you can't help but admire the level skill he manages to put in his drawings. There is a very big noir feeling in this novel (a plus for ) that is just delivered so well that any preferences in art I may have against Sale are put away in admiring the way he plays with lighting in the story. My biggest complaint for the art, which is a more of a personal thing really, is that I do not like the "pixie" costume they gave Robin (which is his default costume that many would associate him with). I have never really liked this costume, probably never will, but again, this is just me. Overall, I would say I really enjoyed the novel and would have to recommend it to any fans of the Batman (although I'd make sure you have read The Long Halloween first). This has come to be one of my most favorited Batman stories I've read, and I hope others will receive the same level of satisfaction that I have.
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