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Armadillidium maculatum (Zebra Isopods) Care

Armadillidium maculatum (Zebra Isopods) Care: A UK Practical Guide

Armadillidium maculatum, popularly known as Zebra Isopods, are properly one of the most distinctive Mediterranean Armadillidium species in the UK hobby. Their bold black-and-white striped pattern makes them instantly recognisable, and their hardy adaptability suits intermediate keepers ready to move beyond basic species. This guide covers their actual biology and proper husbandry.

About the Species

Zebra Isopods are Mediterranean — properly originating from southern France, northern Italy, and surrounding regions. Despite occasional sources suggesting otherwise, they're temperate rather than tropical, and this fundamentally affects how you keep them.

Key biological facts:

  • Size: 12-18mm adults — properly larger than most P. scaber morphs
  • Origin: Mediterranean (southern France, northern Italy)
  • Behaviour: Conglobators (roll into a ball when disturbed)
  • Reproduction: Sexual — both males and females required. NOT parthenogenetic, despite some sources claiming so
  • Gestation: Approximately 30-40 days
  • Breeding rate: Moderate — reliable in good conditions but not particularly prolific
  • Lifespan: 2-3 years for adults
  • Visibility: Properly more often visible than many Armadillidium — patterns make them rewarding display animals

Available Morphs

Several selectively-bred colour morphs are available in the UK hobby:

  • Standard Zebra — classic bold black-and-white stripes on dark base. Browse our Zebra Isopods
  • Yellow Zebra — yellow tinting added to the striping pattern. Browse our Yellow Zebra Isopods
  • Chocolate Zebra — brown/chocolate substitution for the typical black. Browse our Chocolate Zebra Isopods

Enclosure Setup

Container

10-litre minimum for a starter colony. Plastic storage container with secure lid and mesh ventilation works perfectly well. Properly add cross-flow ventilation — Mediterranean species need good airflow, not stagnant high humidity.

Substrate

Standard Mediterranean Armadillidium substrate mix:

  • 40-50% coconut fibre as moisture-retaining base
  • 20-30% organic topsoil or flake soil
  • Crumbled decaying hardwood throughout
  • Generous leaf litter layer on top
  • Small limestone pieces optional (Zebras tolerate but don't require)

Depth: 5-8cm minimum. Properly avoid peat moss (acidic, wrong for Mediterranean species).

Hides and Structure

  • Cork bark — properly essential
  • Lotus pods — natural enclosed spaces
  • Decaying wood pieces (also food)
  • Multiple hides at different humidity microclimates

Calcium

Always-available cuttlebone — properly never crushed or powdered. Passive access; Zebras consume as needed. See our calcium supplementation article.

Environmental Conditions

Temperature

Properly 18-22°C — standard UK room temperature is fine. Don't need supplemental heating in most UK homes. Mediterranean species evolved with seasonal temperature variation and tolerate moderate ranges well. Heat mats or lamps are properly unnecessary and can stress them by creating overly warm zones.

If your home is consistently cool (under 16°C in winter), a low-wattage heat mat under part of the enclosure provides a gentle thermal gradient. Properly never heat lamps for isopods — they dry out substrate rapidly.

Humidity

Properly 60-70% with a humidity GRADIENT. This is crucial: Mediterranean species need both moist and drier zones available. Both ends of the enclosure should differ:

  • Wetter end: lightly misted substrate, sphagnum moss patches
  • Drier end: rarely misted, more open substrate

Mist the wetter end every few days; let the drier end mostly stay drier. Zebras self-regulate by moving between zones as needed — properly an essential Mediterranean species adaptation.

One important correction to common misinformation: Zebras (and all terrestrial isopods) have pleopodal lungs, NOT gills. Their breathing structures evolved from gills in marine isopod ancestors but are properly different now. They need humid air to function but not wet conditions throughout. Soaking-wet substrate is properly damaging.

Feeding

Foundation Diet

  • Leaf litter — properly the dietary foundation. Oak, beech, hornbeam, maple — see our leaves feeding article
  • Decaying hardwood — both food and habitat
  • Flake soil — background nutrition
  • Calcium — always-available cuttlebone

Fresh Vegetables (1-2 Times Weekly)

  • Courgette/zucchini
  • Carrot
  • Cucumber
  • Sweet potato
  • Butternut squash
  • Apple slices (occasionally)

Chop small, remove uneaten material within 48-72 hours. Different colonies have different preferences.

Protein Supplements (Weekly Maximum)

Properly use standard hobby protein:

  • Fish flakes — properly the standard. Easy, clean, slow to rot
  • Dried shrimp / bloodworm — clean protein with some calcium
  • Repashy Bug Burger — commercial isopod formulation

Properly avoid: dog food and cat food (high fat content, attracts mites), cooked chicken/fish (attracts mould/mites rapidly), calcium powder dusting (reptile-feeder approach not suitable for isopods).

Breeding

A. maculatum are SEXUALLY reproducing. Both males and females required. There's properly no parthenogenesis in this species, despite some sources claiming otherwise.

Once mated, females carry developing embryos in their marsupium (brood pouch) for approximately 30-40 days before releasing live mancae (baby isopods). With proper husbandry, colonies produce broods regularly though not as prolifically as Powder species or Dairy Cows.

Breeding conditions:

  • Stable temperature (18-22°C)
  • Proper humidity gradient (drier end available)
  • Adequate hides and refuges
  • Varied diet with adequate protein
  • Consistent calcium provision
  • Avoid frequent disturbance during breeding

Mancae develop within the substrate and emerge gradually. Properly don't worry if you don't see them immediately — they hide in substrate while small.

Handling: A Note

Properly worth being clear: Zebras (and all isopods) are best treated as observational pets, NOT handling pets. While you can briefly hold them for inspection or transfer, regular handling:

  • Stresses them — they hide and freeze, properly not interactive like a vertebrate
  • Risks dehydration — hand warmth dries their cuticle quickly
  • Risks accidental damage — soft moulting individuals especially vulnerable
  • Provides no benefit to them — they don't "tame" or "socialise"

For viewing, use a clear container with substrate or observe in their enclosure. Properly the best way to enjoy Zebras is watching them conglobate in their natural setup.

Common Mistakes

Treating as Tropical Species

Properly the most common mistake. Keepers used to Cubaris husbandry maintain Zebras at tropical conditions — too humid, too warm. This stresses them and reduces breeding success.

Sealed Enclosures

Mediterranean species need ventilation. Sealed containers properly cause respiratory stress.

Inadequate Calcium

Calcium powder dusting (sprinkling on food) doesn't work. Always-available cuttlebone is the proper method.

Heat Lamps

Heat lamps dry out the enclosure and stress isopods. Heat mats on thermostats only if needed for cool homes.

Over-Misting

Mediterranean species don't want soggy substrate. Light misting at one end, drier conditions at the other.

Water Dishes

Properly drowning risk. Isopods get all the moisture they need from humid substrate and food. Skip the dish.

Regular Handling

Properly stresses them with no benefit. Observe in their setup instead.

Their Place in a Collection

Zebras are properly an excellent intermediate species:

  • Visually striking with bold patterns
  • Less demanding than premium Cubaris
  • Multiple morph options available (Standard, Yellow, Chocolate)
  • Reliable breeders with proper husbandry
  • Conglobate display behaviour adds interest
  • Properly suit drier vivarium setups too

Properly best started after basic species (Powder Orange, Dairy Cow, P. scaber morphs) have given you husbandry experience. Their slightly more specific needs (humidity gradient, ventilation) make them a useful stepping stone.

Companion Species and Setups

Zebras work well in:

  • Display-only setups — Mediterranean substrate, leaf litter, multiple hides
  • Bearded Dragon bioactives — adjust setup for moisture refuge while keeping main enclosure dry
  • Crested Gecko enclosures — properly compatible with the cooler/drier corner of the enclosure
  • Mixed Armadillidium displays (with caution) — different morphs together properly risk hybridisation; stick to one Armadillidium species per enclosure

For broader Armadillidium guidance browse our Armadillidium collection.

For setup essentials browse our accessories collection.

Properly straightforward to keep once you understand they're Mediterranean species — not tropical. Get the humidity gradient and ventilation right and Zebras thrive for years, showing off their distinctive patterns and reliable breeding.


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