SKU: 50654099484

Armadillidium vulgare 'Big Italy' (Giant Italian) Isopods for Sale

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Description

Armadillidium vulgare 'Big Italy' (Giant Italian) Isopods for SaleArmadillidium vulgare 'Big Italy', commonly known as the Giant Italian Isopod, is an Italian locality of the world's most successful terrestrial isopod selectively bred to express the larger body size that some Italian populations naturally show. While standard pill bugs reach around 1018 mm, Big Italy specimens regularly exceed 20 mm, giving them a genuinely substantial presence and making them one of the largest A. vulgare locality variants in the

Armadillidium vulgare 'Big Italy', commonly known as the Giant Italian Isopod, is an Italian locality of the world's most successful terrestrial isopod — selectively-bred to express the larger body size that some Italian populations naturally show. While standard pill bugs reach around 10–18 mm, Big Italy specimens regularly exceed 20 mm, giving them a genuinely substantial presence and making them one of the largest A. vulgare locality variants in the UK hobby. They retain everything that makes the common pill bug such a reliable keep — hardy temperament, classic conglobation, easy care, drought tolerance — but with the added visual impact of properly substantial adults.

A. vulgare itself is arguably the most successful terrestrial isopod on the planet. Originally from the Mediterranean, it has spread to every continent except Antarctica, thriving in gardens, forests, and urban environments worldwide. Most people have encountered them — they're the classic "roly-poly" or "pill bug" that rolls into a ball when disturbed. The Big Italy locality represents Italian populations bred to express the larger end of that species' natural size range, and the result is an isopod that's instantly familiar but noticeably more substantial.

They sit naturally alongside other Italian Armadillidium in the PostPods range — particularly A. gestroi and its 'Milky Way' selective morph, plus the Northern Italian A. tirolense 'Lake Garda' — and within the broader A. vulgare morph cluster alongside Magic Potion and the T+ Albino. Like all Armadillidium, they conglobate into a tight defensive ball when disturbed — and that classic rolling behaviour is genuinely more impressive at 20+ mm.

Quick Care Summary

  • Scientific Name: Armadillidium vulgare 'Big Italy'
  • Common Names: Giant Italian, Big Italy, Italian Giant Pill Bug
  • Family: Armadillidiidae
  • Origin: Italy (locality variant; captive-bred)
  • Adult Size: 20+ mm — substantially larger than the typical A. vulgare 10–18 mm
  • Lifespan: 2–5 years; 2–3 years typical
  • Difficulty: Easy — the most forgiving Armadillidium for beginners
  • Temperature: 18–27°C; tolerates wider range (near freezing to 37°C)
  • Humidity: 50–70% with a moisture gradient
  • Ventilation: Medium
  • Conglobation: Yes — tight, complete spheres
  • Sexual Dimorphism: Yes — males typically gunmetal grey; females brown with yellowish markings
  • Behaviour: Active day and night; highly social; aggregating in groups of up to 200
  • Breeding: Steady year-round in stable conditions
  • Rarity: Rare — limited locality stock in the UK hobby

What Makes Big Italy Isopods Special

Several factors make the Big Italy a properly worthwhile A. vulgare:

The size. This is the headline. At 20+ mm, they're substantially larger than standard pill bugs and noticeably bigger than most popular A. vulgare morphs. The difference isn't subtle — adult Big Italies have real presence, and the classic conglobation is genuinely more impressive on a larger isopod. Watching a 20+ mm pill bug curl into a perfect sphere is properly satisfying.

Genuinely easy. A. vulgare is the species against which beginner isopods are measured. They tolerate near-freezing temperatures up to 37°C, handle dramatic humidity variation, and forgive most husbandry mistakes. Hardy, adaptable, and reliable — ideal for first-time isopod keepers who want something substantial.

Drought tolerance. Remarkably, A. vulgare can survive 0% humidity for periods that would kill most isopods. Research shows that conglobation also reduces water loss significantly — when curled into a ball, exposed surface area drops and moisture is retained. This makes them genuinely tolerant of less-than-perfect conditions.

Fascinating biology. They engage in coprophagy — eating their own droppings — to recover copper for the haemocyanin in their blood. (Unlike vertebrates whose blood uses iron-based haemoglobin, isopods carry oxygen using a copper-based pigment, and they need to recycle the copper.) It's a genuinely interesting bit of natural history that the species illustrates well.

Highly social with aggregation pheromones. They release attractant chemicals that draw conspecifics together, leading to clusters of up to 200 individuals under favoured hiding spots — these aggregations create their own humid microclimates. Watching the colony cluster and disperse based on conditions is a quiet pleasure of keeping them.

Visible sexual dimorphism. Adult males are typically gunmetal grey; females are brown with yellowish markings — sexing is straightforward at maturity, useful for breeders and naturalists alike.

Conglobation. Tight, complete spheres when disturbed — the classic roly-poly behaviour at impressive size.

How Big Italy Compares to Other Armadillidium and Italian Species

If you're choosing between large or Italian Armadillidium, here's how Big Italy fits in:

  • vs Magic Potion (A. vulgare): Same species, very different look. Magic Potion is the smaller pale-toned A. vulgare morph (~15 mm); Big Italy is the larger Italian locality (20+ mm) with classic vulgare colouration. Same care, different size and palette.
  • vs A. vulgare T+ Albino: Both are A. vulgare variants. T+ Albino is the smaller orange-gold albino morph; Big Italy is the larger Italian wild-type locality. Different colour philosophies, same easy care.
  • vs A. gestroi: Both are large Italian Armadillidium. A. gestroi shows rows of yellow spots on a darker body and is a coastal Mediterranean species; Big Italy is the larger common pill bug from inland Italian populations. Natural Italian Armadillidium companions.
  • vs A. gestroi 'Milky Way': Both are large Italian Armadillidium morphs. Milky Way is the UK-bred speckled-pattern gestroi; Big Italy is the size-focused vulgare locality. Different selection priorities (pattern vs size), same Italian heritage.
  • vs Lake Garda (A. tirolense): Both are Italian Armadillidium with substantial size. Lake Garda is the Northern Italian sub-Alpine neon-and-black species; Big Italy is the size-maximised common pill bug. Both Italian, very different aesthetics.

Browse the full Armadillidium collection to compare all species and morphs.

Setting Up the Enclosure

Big Italy adults benefit from slightly more space than smaller species, given their larger body size and tendency to aggregate in groups. A 12-litre container suits a starter colony; established colonies thrive in 25+ litre setups or larger terrariums where they can spread and show natural aggregation behaviours. The 3L Braplast tub works only for the smallest starter groups; this species genuinely benefits from more space.

Drill ventilation holes on opposite sides for cross-ventilation, covered with fine mesh. Medium ventilation suits them — they handle airflow better than tropical species. Provide plenty of hides — cork bark flats, leaf litter, decaying wood, and flat stones — where they'll cluster in their characteristic aggregations. Browse our accessories collection for appropriate enclosures, vents, and other essentials.

Substrate

Build a basic moisture-retentive substrate appropriate for this hardy Mediterranean species:

  • Organic topsoil base (pesticide-free) as the foundation
  • Sphagnum peat moss mixed throughout for moisture retention
  • Crushed limestone or eggshells distributed throughout for calcium — particularly important for substantial adults
  • Flake soil mixed in for added nutrition
  • Decaying hardwood pieces and rotting wood incorporated throughout

We recommend a topsoil and sphagnum-based mix rather than coco coir. Substrate depth: 5–8 cm for burrowing — they'll dig into substrate during dry periods to find suitable moisture.

Top layer: Generous hardwood leaf litter — magnolia leaves, oak, and beech all work well — plus cork bark flats and decaying wood for hides. Flat stones or bark slabs create the kind of preferred aggregation spots where colonies cluster.

Humidity and Temperature

Maintain 50–70% humidity with a moisture gradient — keep one-quarter to one-third of the enclosure damp with sphagnum moss and damp leaf litter, with the rest drier and well-ventilated. The Big Italy is genuinely drought-tolerant — they handle drier conditions better than almost any other isopod — but they still appreciate access to moist areas and will migrate between zones based on their hydration needs. Provide the gradient and let them choose.

As one PostPods customer noted about following the website's care guidance, getting moisture right is the key to keeping isopods successfully — and the Big Italy makes this easy because they're forgiving. Even less-than-ideal conditions rarely cause problems, but the gradient still produces healthier, more visible colonies than uniform conditions either way.

Temperature should be 18–27°C — room temperature works year-round. They tolerate a remarkably wide range — from near freezing up to about 37°C — and a slight night drop into the mid-teens mimics natural conditions. Aggregation pheromones activate more strongly between 20–30°C, so warmer rooms produce more visible social behaviour.

Diet

Big Italy isopods are detritivores with broad appetites:

  • Primary diet (always available): Hardwood leaf litter (oak, beech, maple, birch), decaying white-rotted wood, decomposing plant matter
  • Vegetables (1–2x weekly): Carrot, potato, sweet potato, squash, apple, pear. Replace within 24–48 hours.
  • Fruit (occasionally): Small amounts of soft fruit
  • Protein (1x weekly): Fish flakes, dried shrimp, dried insects, reptile shed skin (when available). Browse our accessories collection for the full range of protein supplements.
  • Calcium (essential — always available): Cuttlefish bone, crushed limestone, oyster shell, eggshells. Particularly important for large adults — A. vulgare prefers calcium-rich soils in the wild, and adequate calcium supports the substantial exoskeleton.

Coprophagy is normal: They eat their own droppings to recover copper for the haemocyanin in their blood. This is normal behaviour, not a sign of inadequate feeding — don't worry when you see it.

Live plants: Like other Armadillidium, they may nibble live plant material if other food is insufficient. In bioactive setups with planted enclosures, ensure they have abundant leaf litter and decaying wood to redirect their attention.

Breeding

A. vulgare breeds readily with no special requirements — including the Big Italy locality.

Breeding basics:

  • Females first reproduce at 3–4 months old
  • Multiple broods throughout their lifetime (iteroparous)
  • Females can store sperm and produce young even without recent mating — a genuinely useful adaptation for colony stability
  • Breed more commonly in spring/summer, but reproduce year-round in stable captive conditions
  • Females carry developing young (mancae) in a fluid-filled marsupium (brood pouch) that protects them from desiccation

For breeding success:

  • Stable temperatures (20–25°C is ideal)
  • A proper moisture gradient (50–70% with a damp side)
  • Adequate calcium for large breeding females
  • Regular protein supplementation
  • Plenty of cork bark and leaf-litter hides
  • A larger starter group establishes faster and provides genetic diversity

Expect steady colony expansion once established — not the fastest breeders among isopods, but reliable and consistent. Higher temperatures and adequate moisture encourage breeding activity.

Pair With Springtails

Add a thriving springtail culture to any Big Italy setup. Springtails handle mould and microbial growth at a scale isopods can't manage — particularly useful around protein foods and in the moist zone of the moisture gradient. They coexist peacefully with the Big Italy and form a helpful cleanup partnership.

Who Should Buy Big Italy Isopods?

Ideal for:

  • Beginners wanting impressive, easy isopods with real presence
  • Keepers who appreciate classic pill bugs but want substantial adults
  • Bioactive setup builders needing hardy, drought-tolerant cleanup crews
  • Collectors building an Italian Armadillidium cluster (Big Italy + A. gestroi + Milky Way + Lake Garda)
  • Display colony enthusiasts where visibility and conglobation impact matter
  • Reptile and amphibian keepers needing persistent cleanup populations
  • Naturalists interested in aggregation behaviour and pheromone-driven social biology

Not ideal for:

  • Keepers wanting small, fast-breeding feeder colonies
  • Very humid tropical setups (they survive but don't thrive)
  • Heavily-planted bioactive setups (they may nibble live plants)
  • Those wanting rare, exotic-looking colour morphs (these look like big classic pill bugs)
  • Cleanup crews for small predators — adults are too large for dart frogs and small geckos

Realistic Expectations

They look like big pill bugs. The Big Italy isn't a colour morph — it's a size morph. Set expectations toward "the classic roly-poly, just bigger" rather than exotic looks. Their appeal is presence, behaviour, and substance — not colour.

The size difference is real but not dramatic. We're talking 20+ mm rather than the typical 10–18 mm — noticeable when seen side by side with standard pill bugs, particularly impressive on conglobated adults, but they're still recognisable pill bugs rather than something unrecognisably enormous.

They're remarkably easy. Forgive most husbandry mistakes, tolerate wide condition ranges, breed reliably. Among the easiest isopods to keep alive, even compared to other beginner species.

The biology is genuinely interesting. Aggregation pheromones, copper-based haemocyanin, coprophagy for copper recycling, sexual dimorphism in colour, sperm storage in females. A. vulgare rewards keepers who pay attention to behaviour and biology.

They aggregate in big groups. Don't be surprised to find 100+ adults clustered under a single piece of cork bark — that's normal social behaviour driven by aggregation pheromones, not a sign of overcrowding.

Building Your Setup

A complete Big Italy setup needs a roomy enclosure, basic substrate components, abundant calcium, generous leaf litter, multiple cork bark hides and flat stones (for the preferred aggregation spots), and protein supplements. Browse our accessories collection for everything you need — enclosures, ventilation, leaf litter, calcium (cuttlebone, limestone, oyster shell), and protein supplements.

Browse the full Armadillidium collection for more species and morphs — including the smaller pale Magic Potion for an A. vulgare morph contrast, or other Italian Armadillidium like A. gestroi, A. gestroi 'Milky Way', and Lake Garda for a complete Italian cluster.

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SKU: 50654099484

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Shianne Whipple
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Strong Omegaverse Comfort and a Attention Grabbing Plot
Format: Kindle
Jillian West never misses when it comes to Omegaverse, and Not Ready is no exception. This story was the perfect blend of cozy comfort and emotional depth while still delivering a strong plot. Vale is such a powerful heroine, she is strong, capable, and determined but I love that she still allows her pack to love and take care of her. It’s that balance of independence and vulnerability that makes her so relatable. The relationship dynamics were amazing: Bishop is steadfast and completely head over heels, Mercy is skeptical but protective in his own way, and Holt is the hesitant one whose slow fall is so satisfying to watch unfold. The romance hits that sweet spot between insta-love and cautious build, keeping me hooked the entire way through. And that ending. Oh my god, the cliffhanger! I need the next book in this duet immediately.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 28, 2025
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NLB
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
Interesting
Format: Kindle
So I will say I enjoyed the story, for sure had its moments where it dragged but it was a great story. I really liked that omegas picked their alphas/make the pack. Normally the Alphas make it and the omega fits in with them which is great but I enjoyed this new version where all the power basically went to the omega. It was a nice change of pace. I can admit some of the weird bedroom stuff with her being pregnant was odd, it’s really not hard to do stuff when pregnant (I know I’ve had two and it’s normal and even encouraged at the end especially if you want the baby out). But I like the story as a whole and will read the second, I do hope the next one isn’t dragged bc it stopped being action or tense after she met her alphas and I don’t think it was brought up or properly done when they tried to do it. More sweet after she left.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 11, 2024
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Altairjones
Houston, US
★★★★★ 3
I’m a little disappointed.
Format: Kindle
I usually like Jillian West’s books but this one was missing a lot for me. The pregnancy didn’t come across as real. She’s on her feet for 12 hour days but is perfectly healthy at 8 months pregnant? Yet the week she moves in all of a sudden she’s not? She is planning on actually running during one of the plot buildups. But at 8 months pregnant that’s incredibly hard to do. The lack of breathing ability and lung space, the change in body center, mass, and gravity. All of it prohibits running, unless you’re an athlete this didn’t come off as at all realistic. I didn’t feel any connection with the alphas. There wasn’t any emotional connection. It could be because of the tense it was written in. But I didn’t get any deep feelings out of this. It came across as checking off boxes. Even the spicy scenes weren’t really believable for me. I wanted to see them fall for her, and it just kind of all fizzled. Even Bishop. One thing I did really like was the ending. I did not see it coming and I’m interested in reading book two because of it. But on the whole this book was mostly disappointing for me.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2024
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Melissa Williams
New York, US
★★★★★ 4
4.25 stars
Format: Kindle
Vale is an 8 month pregnant omega working as a waitress at a strip club and a cam girl. She starts to get very creepy vibes from a regular at the club, and her baby daddy ghosted her. She has had an online relationship with a man named Bishop through her cam girl status. One night, bishop was paying to watch her sleep and ansthe creepy regular Andrew break in and watch her sleep he tells vale to come to him at his business now. She flees and finds herself at a large security company with some.hot of alphas who are there to help her. This imegaverse is a little different than I have read, but I am thoroughly enjoying it. Vale is not a traditional omega she was raised by a single beta mom, and the alphas are not normal alphas they have never really loved pack life. But they are ruthless mercenaries. They need her, and she needs them. I love the aspect of the stalker and now the plot twists at the end, so so good. Sometimes, it seemed a little slow and stale mated, but since this a duet, I think It was just her starting to have Vale get to know her alpha suitors. Cliffhanger for sure with this one.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2024
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Austin & Cambria
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
That ending 😫
Format: Kindle
I fell into a false sense of security and really thought this was gearing towards a happy ending. Then I realized there’s no work they don’t punish Andrew. I really liked Vale’s character. I don’t normally read books with pregnancy but going into this knowing she was pregnant made it more enjoyable for me. I loved Bishops devotion to her and her happiness. I also loved that Holt and Mercy couldn’t fight their attraction to her. I love scent matches so very much. I’m so curious to see how this duet will end up. And I need to pay more attention and notice that a book I’m starting is a duet to begin with lol
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Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2025

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