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Ardentiella sp. 'Ember Bee' Isopods for Sale

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Description

Ardentiella sp. 'Ember Bee' Isopods for SaleArdentiella sp. 'Ember Bee' is one of the most striking and sought after Asian display isopods in the UK hobby a genuinely beautiful Vietnamese species with bold black and warm stripe colouration that gives it its evocative name. The body shows jet black legs and underside contrasting with glowing dorsal stripes in shades of red, orange, and yellow like ember light on a bee's pattern. Colour varies between individuals and broods (some show yellow

Ardentiella sp. 'Ember Bee' is one of the most striking and sought-after Asian display isopods in the UK hobby — a genuinely beautiful Vietnamese species with bold black-and-warm-stripe colouration that gives it its evocative name. The body shows jet-black legs and underside contrasting with glowing dorsal stripes in shades of red, orange, and yellow — like ember light on a bee's pattern. Colour varies between individuals and broods (some show yellow-dominant, some red, some with a fine powdered finish), which gives a colony genuine visual variety. Combined with their notably large size and bold, active behaviour, the Ember Bee is properly distinctive — and rare enough that it's a real prize for serious collectors.

The species has had an interesting taxonomic journey worth knowing about. Originally classified and widely traded as Merulanella sp. 'Ember Bee', it was reclassified to the new genus Ardentiella following recent research, and you'll also occasionally see it traded as Ardentiella sp. 'Pastel'. All these names refer to the same animal. The Ember Bee sits squarely within the recently-reorganised formerly-Merulanella group — natural companions to species like the Sinodillo sp. 'China' and the Merulanella sp. 'Red Diablo', all of which belong to this newly-clarified taxonomic cluster. Browse the broader Ardentiella (ex-Merulanella) collection to see related species.

One quietly unusual feature worth knowing about: Ember Bees are arboreal. Unlike most isopods (which are floor-dwelling burrowers), they prefer to climb and explore vertical surfaces — congregating on bark, twigs, and elevated cover rather than burrowing. This makes them properly engaging as display animals and means they benefit from a taller, well-decorated enclosure with plenty of vertical structure. Like all Armadillidae, they conglobate (roll into a tight defensive ball) when disturbed.

Quick Care Summary

  • Scientific Name: Ardentiella sp. 'Ember Bee' (formerly Merulanella sp. 'Ember Bee')
  • Common Names: Ember Bee, Merulanella Ember Bee (older name)
  • Family: Armadillidae
  • Origin: Vietnam
  • Adult Size: Up to approximately 19 mm — one of the largest Ardentiella/Merulanella species in the hobby
  • Lifespan: 2–3 years typical
  • Difficulty: Medium for captive-bred stock; not recommended for absolute beginners
  • Temperature: 19–26°C — they prefer the cooler middle of this range; sustained warmth causes stress
  • Humidity: Moderately high (60–75%) with damp substrate and dry patches for airflow
  • Ventilation: Good — balance with humidity retention
  • Conglobation: Yes — rolls into a tight defensive ball
  • Habit: Arboreal — climbs and uses vertical surfaces; not a burrower
  • Behaviour: Bold, active, energetic, and exploratory; active day and night (more at night)
  • Breeding: Fast reproduction rate once established
  • Rarity: Very rare — a sought-after premium species

What Makes Ember Bee Isopods Special

Several factors make the Ember Bee a genuinely exceptional Ardentiella:

The ember-and-bee colouration. This is the headline — and the name is exactly right. Jet-black legs and underside frame a dorsal pattern of glowing reds, oranges, and yellows reminiscent of ember light, in stripes and patches that evoke a bee's banding. The contrast is sharp, the colours warm, and each individual carries its own variation. A settled colony is genuinely striking.

Notable size for the group. The Ember Bee is one of the largest Ardentiella/Merulanella species kept in the hobby — substantially bigger than most of its close relatives, with adults reaching around 19 mm. Combined with the bold colour, they have real presence in the enclosure.

Arboreal habit. A genuinely unusual feature among isopods — Ember Bees climb. They use bark, twigs, lichen-covered branches, and vertical decor surfaces rather than burrowing, which makes them properly engaging display animals and means you'll see them throughout the enclosure rather than mostly underground.

An interesting taxonomic story. Recently reclassified from Merulanella to Ardentiella following new research, the Ember Bee sits at the leading edge of active hobby taxonomy. For collectors interested in the science as well as the keeping, that's a genuine ongoing story.

Bold, active, and visible. Unlike many shy tropical isopods, the Ember Bee is notably active and exploratory — you'll see plenty of them as a colony settles, particularly at night and in dim conditions. They're properly engaging to watch.

Safe with live plants. Unlike many isopods that nibble live plants in bioactive setups, the Ember Bee doesn't bother live plants or roots — making them a good choice for keepers running heavily-planted vivariums where plant safety matters.

Conglobation. Like other Armadillidae, they roll into a tight defensive ball when disturbed — the classic rounded behaviour, here on a vibrantly-coloured arboreal Vietnamese isopod.

How Ember Bee Compares to Other Formerly-Merulanella Species

If you're choosing between species in the recently-reorganised formerly-Merulanella group, here's how the Ember Bee fits in:

  • vs Sinodillo sp. 'China': Both are formerly-Merulanella species recently reclassified. Sinodillo 'China' is the Chinese cinnamon-red-headed species on a bluish-grey body; Ember Bee is the larger Vietnamese arboreal species with ember-and-bee striping. Natural taxonomic neighbours.
  • vs Merulanella sp. 'Red Diablo': Both are striking Asian display isopods in the broader formerly-Merulanella cluster. Red Diablo shows deep red colouration; Ember Bee is the larger, more variably-coloured ember-and-bee species. Natural companions.
  • vs Rubber Ducky: Rubber Duckies are iconic premium Cubaris with their duck-faced markings; Ember Bee is the rare arboreal Vietnamese alternative. Different families, both premium display species.

Browse the full Ardentiella (ex-Merulanella) collection for all related species, or the complete isopods range for the wider catalogue.

Setting Up the Enclosure — Plan for an Arboreal

The Ember Bee's arboreal habit makes enclosure setup a little different from typical floor-dwelling isopods. Go taller rather than wider — a vertical enclosure or terrarium with good height suits them best. Recreate a structured, climbable interior:

  • Layered decaying leaves on the substrate
  • Forest moss across the surface and on vertical elements
  • Twigs and small branches (lichen-covered are particularly good)
  • Multiple pieces of cork bark or tree bark — both flat on the substrate and propped vertically
  • Climbing routes between substrate and elevated cover
  • Plenty of crevices for hiding and conglobating

The bright colour shows particularly beautifully against dark naturalistic substrate and bark. Plastic tubs with clip-lock lids work but a taller terrarium is preferable for displaying this species. Keep the enclosure dim and out of direct sunlight. Browse our accessories collection for appropriate enclosures, vents, and other essentials.

Substrate

Use a moisture-retentive, calcium-rich substrate appropriate for a tropical Vietnamese species:

  • Organic topsoil (pesticide-free) as the base
  • Sphagnum peat moss and sphagnum moss for moisture retention
  • Flake soil for added nutrition and structure
  • Crushed limestone or eggshells worked throughout for calcium
  • Generous decaying hardwood pieces and leaf litter mixed in
  • Forest moss layered through the top portion

We recommend a topsoil and sphagnum-based mix rather than coco coir. Substrate depth: at least 5 cm — even though they're not burrowers, depth supports moisture retention and microfauna.

Top layer: Generous hardwood leaf litter — magnolia leaves work particularly well — plus forest moss, lichen-covered twigs, and propped cork bark for their preferred elevated cover.

Humidity and Temperature

Maintain moderately high humidity (around 60–75%) with damp substrate and dry patches for airflow. Mist the enclosure periodically rather than letting it become waterlogged. Many keepers handle the Ember Bee like a Cubaris — slightly wetter than the average isopod, but with consistent airflow to prevent stagnation. The arboreal habit means humidity should be present throughout the enclosure, not just at the substrate level.

Temperature is genuinely important. The Ember Bee prefers the cooler middle of its 19–26°C range. Sustained higher temperatures cause stress and can lead to rapid die-offs — this is a documented sensitivity worth taking seriously, particularly in UK summers when ambient temperatures can climb. Keep them in a cooler room or on a north-facing wall, and ensure ventilation increases during warm weather.

As one PostPods customer noted about following the website's care guidance, getting moisture right is the key to keeping isopods successfully — too much moisture is a common, avoidable mistake. With the Ember Bee, both moisture and temperature matter — aim for steady damp-not-soaking conditions in a consistently cool location.

Diet

Ember Bee isopods are detritivores with broad appetites:

  • Staples (always available): Hardwood leaf litter (oak, beech), decaying rotting wood, forest moss, lichen, and the substrate's organic matter
  • Vegetables (1–2x weekly): Carrot, courgette, baby corn, sweet potato — known favourites. Replace within 24–48 hours.
  • Fruit (occasionally): Small amounts of soft fruit; mango is a particular favourite
  • Protein (1–2x weekly): Fish flakes, dried shrimp. Browse our accessories collection for the full range of protein supplements.
  • Calcium (essential — always available): Cuttlefish bone, crushed limestone, eggshells, oyster shell. Important for healthy moulting on a relatively large species — provide a constant source.

Feeding approach: Maintain a base of leaf litter and decaying wood, supplementing with small amounts of vegetables, occasional fruit (mango is genuinely well-liked), regular protein, and a constant calcium source. Remove uneaten fresh foods within 24–48 hours to prevent mould in the humid conditions they require.

Breeding

Ember Bees breed at a fast rate once established under stable conditions — surprisingly productive for a rare premium species, which is part of their appeal.

Breeding basics:

  • Females brood eggs in a marsupium and release fully-formed live young
  • Reproduction is fast once a colony settles
  • The vivid ember-and-bee colouration develops as juveniles mature
  • Colour varies between broods — some yellow-dominant, some red, some with finer powdered finishes

For breeding success:

  • Consistent moderate humidity (60–75%) — avoid fluctuations
  • Cooler stable temperature (20–23°C is ideal; avoid heat)
  • Abundant calcium for breeding females
  • Plenty of vertical cover and hide structure
  • A larger starter group establishes faster and provides genetic diversity

As a fast-producing breeder once established, the Ember Bee rewards careful, cool, consistent husbandry with steady colony growth — and watching the colour variation across successive broods is one of the genuine satisfactions of keeping them.

Pair With Springtails

Add a thriving springtail culture to any Ember Bee setup. Springtails handle mould and microbial growth at a scale isopods can't manage — particularly important in the humid conditions Ember Bees prefer, and around protein foods. They coexist peacefully with the Ember Bee and form an essential cleanup partnership.

Who Should Buy Ember Bee Isopods?

Ideal for:

  • Experienced keepers wanting a rare, distinctive display species
  • Collectors building a formerly-Merulanella cluster (Ember Bee, Sinodillo, Red Diablo)
  • Keepers drawn to bold ember-and-bee colouration
  • Hobbyists interested in active hobby taxonomy and recently-reclassified genera
  • Vertical/arboreal terrarium builders — they suit taller enclosures
  • Heavily-planted bioactive setups where plant-nibbling isopods would be problematic (Ember Bees don't bother plants)

Not ideal for:

  • Complete beginners — start with hardier species like Cubaris murina first
  • Warm rooms that can't stay cool through summer (they're heat-sensitive)
  • Setups prone to humidity fluctuation (consistency matters)
  • Shallow horizontal enclosures (they want vertical height)
  • Anyone wanting a budget cleanup crew — this is a premium display species

Realistic Expectations

Colour varies between individuals and broods. The "ember" framing is right — yellow, orange, and red all appear in different proportions across the colony, with some individuals showing finer powdered finishes. Natural variation is part of the appeal.

They want it cool, not warm. Don't keep them in your warmest room — sustained higher temperatures cause stress and risk colony die-off. Aim for the cooler middle of the range, particularly through UK summer heatwaves.

They climb. Plan for an arboreal setup with vertical structure and elevated cover. A standard shallow plastic tub doesn't suit them as well as a taller terrarium with bark, twigs, and climbing routes.

They're rare and premium. Set price expectations accordingly — this is a sought-after collector's species, not a budget cleanup crew. Captive-bred stock is more manageable than wild-collected, but neither is a beginner species.

They don't burrow. Unlike most isopods, Ember Bees congregate on the surface and on elevated cover rather than disappearing into the substrate. This makes them properly visible, which is a real selling point — but means they need plenty of surface cover where they can shelter without burrowing.

Building Your Setup

A complete Ember Bee setup needs a taller enclosure with vertical structure (bark, twigs, lichen-covered branches), a humidity-retentive calcium-rich substrate, abundant leaf litter and moss, and protein supplements. Browse our accessories collection for everything you need — enclosures, ventilation, leaf litter, calcium (cuttlebone, limestone, oyster shell), and protein supplements.

Explore the Ardentiella (ex-Merulanella) collection for closely related species in the recently-reclassified group — including the Sinodillo sp. 'China' — or browse the full isopods range for the broader catalogue.

Shipping Notes
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Exchange/Return Notes
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  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
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SKU: 62547716404

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