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Isopods for terrariums: the heavy-duty cleanup crew

When springtails aren't enough, isopods handle the bigger jobs. Species, care, and pairing with terrariums.

By Mossroom Team · · 6 min read

Isopods (pillbugs, sowbugs, rolly pollies) are the heavy-duty cleanup crew for terrariums. They eat larger organic debris that springtails can’t handle.

What isopods do

  • Eat dead leaves and plant matter
  • Break down larger debris
  • Aerate substrate as they burrow
  • Compete with pest species

They pair with springtails for a complete cleanup system.

Best species for terrariums

Dwarf white isopods (Trichorhina tomentosa)

  • Size: Tiny (5mm)
  • Best for: Small terrariums, beginners
  • Behavior: Gentle, won’t damage plants
  • Reproduction: Fast

The default terrarium isopod. Almost everyone starts here.

Powder orange isopods (Porcellionides pruinosus)

  • Size: Small (8mm)
  • Best for: Medium terrariums, color interest
  • Behavior: Active, visible
  • Reproduction: Medium

Dairy cow isopods (Porcellio laevis)

  • Size: Medium (15mm)
  • Best for: Larger terrariums
  • Behavior: Fast, bold
  • Reproduction: Fast

Springtails + isopods

Most bioactive builds have BOTH. Springtails handle mold and tiny debris; isopods handle leaves and bigger material.

What to AVOID

  • Wild-caught isopods — may carry parasites, unknown species
  • Giant isopods (Porcellio scaber large varieties) — damage plants
  • Pillbugs from outdoors — different species, often too large
  • Armadillidium species in small jars — too big, eat plants when hungry

Where to buy

  • Josh’s Frogs — best quality, ships well
  • The Bio Dude — terrarium-focused
  • Etsy — many small US/EU breeders
  • Local breeders — Facebook groups, r/isopods

Cost: $10-25 per starter culture (10-15 individuals).

How to introduce them

  1. Quarantine new isopods in their own container for 1-2 weeks
  2. Check for pests/disease
  3. Open terrarium
  4. Dump culture into terrarium
  5. They’ll find their spots within hours

Quantity to add:

  • Quart jar: 5-10 individuals
  • Gallon jar: 15-25 individuals
  • 5+ gallon jar: 30-50 individuals

Care in the terrarium

Once established, isopods need almost nothing:

  • Food: Leaf litter + occasional vegetable scraps (carrot, sweet potato)
  • Water: High humidity handles it; mist if dry
  • Light: Avoid direct sun (they hide)
  • Temperature: Most species do fine at 65-80°F

Common problems

Isopods eating plants

Cause: Not enough food elsewhere Fix: Add more leaf litter, supplement with vegetable scraps

Isopods dying off

Cause: Too dry, too hot, or contamination Fix: Increase humidity, check temperature, ensure no chemical exposure

Isopods overrunning the jar

Cause: Too much food available Fix: Reduce feeding, let population stabilize naturally

Can’t see them

Cause: Hiding (normal during day) Fix: Look under leaf litter, lift hardscape. They’re there.

Pairing with springtails

The ideal setup:

  • Springtails control mold and tiny debris
  • Isopods handle larger debris and aerate substrate
  • Together they prevent most terrarium problems

If you can only add one, start with springtails (cheaper, easier, faster setup).

The breeding bonus

Once established, isopod populations are self-sustaining. They breed, the colony grows, and you’ll have a permanent cleanup crew. Many terrarium builders also sell excess cultures to other hobbyists — small side income.

For more on bioactive setups, see our bioactive starter guide.

Questions about your isopod setup? Ask in the Discord.