SKU: 14839611349

Trachelipus Trilobatus (Trilobite) Isopods

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Description

Trachelipus Trilobatus (Trilobite) IsopodsTrachelipus trilobatus the Trilobite Isopod is one of the most distinctive and characterful European isopods in the UK hobby, famous for its wide, shield like body shape and genuine resemblance to the ancient, prehistoric trilobites that give it its name. The flattened, well segmented, shield like silhouette is unlike most isopods, lending it a properly striking, fossil like appearance. In colour they're an understated greyish to dark form, often with

Trachelipus trilobatus — the Trilobite Isopod — is one of the most distinctive and characterful European isopods in the UK hobby, famous for its wide, shield-like body shape and genuine resemblance to the ancient, prehistoric trilobites that give it its name. The flattened, well-segmented, shield-like silhouette is unlike most isopods, lending it a properly striking, fossil-like appearance. In colour they're an understated greyish-to-dark form, often with a subtle orange-tinged ring and solid tones rather than bold markings — a naturalistic, handsome look that lets the dramatic trilobite shape take centre stage. For keepers who appreciate distinctive form over flashy colour, the Trilobite is a genuine standout.

What makes T. trilobatus particularly worth keeping is the combination of that eye-catching prehistoric shape with genuinely easy, beginner-friendly care. They're hardy, adaptable, and prolific — fast breeders that build colonies readily — while remaining undemanding and forgiving. As a Central/Eastern European species tolerant of cooler conditions, they're well-suited to UK keeping at normal room temperatures. They sit alongside their genus-mates Trachelipus caucasius, Trachelipus mostarensis, and Trachelipus difficilis in the lesser-seen but rewarding Trachelipus genus.

They're native to Romania (and neighbouring parts of Central and Eastern Europe), where the species was first described. In appearance and flat shield-like form they somewhat resemble the dry-climate Coros (Porcellio spatulatus), though the Trilobite is smaller, with solid colouring and the distinctive trilobate rear that gives it its name. Like other Trachelipus, they cannot fully conglobate (roll into a complete ball) the way Armadillidium do — instead relying on their flattened shield-shaped body, speed, and finding cover.

Quick Care Summary

  • Scientific Name: Trachelipus trilobatus
  • Common Names: Trilobite Isopod, Trilobatus, Trilobite Woodlouse
  • Family: Trachelipodidae
  • Genus: Trachelipus
  • Origin: Romania (Central/Eastern Europe)
  • Adult Size: Up to approximately 24 mm total length — medium-sized
  • Lifespan: 2–3 years typical
  • Difficulty: Easy — hardy, adaptable, beginner-friendly
  • Temperature: 15–26°C (cold-tolerant; UK room temperature suits them well)
  • Humidity: Medium (55–70%) with a moisture gradient, kept slightly damper than Spanish Porcellio
  • Ventilation: Medium — good airflow important
  • Conglobation: No — flat, shield-shaped; relies on speed and cover
  • Behaviour: Active at night and early morning; peaceful; reasonably visible
  • Breeding: Fast and prolific — reliable, self-sustaining colonies

What Makes Trachelipus trilobatus Special

Several factors make the Trilobite Isopod a genuinely distinctive choice:

The prehistoric trilobite shape. This is the species' defining feature — a wide, flattened, shield-like body that genuinely resembles the ancient trilobites it's named after, with a distinctive trilobate rear. It's a properly striking, fossil-like silhouette quite unlike the rounded or smooth bodies of most isopods, and the single biggest reason collectors seek them out.

Understated, handsome colouring. Their greyish-to-dark solid tones, often with a subtle orange-tinged ring, give them a naturalistic, refined look that lets the dramatic shape take centre stage. They're a great choice for keepers who appreciate distinctive form over bold pattern.

Genuinely easy and prolific. Despite their distinctive appearance, they're hardy, adaptable, and forgiving — and notably fast breeders that build colonies readily. This makes them satisfying for keepers wanting to see colony growth, dependable as a self-sustaining cleanup crew, and genuinely accessible to beginners.

Cold-tolerant and UK-friendly. As a Central/Eastern European species, the Trilobite tolerates cooler conditions and even hard winters well, thriving at normal UK room temperatures without supplemental heating. This makes them genuinely easy and reliable to keep here.

An uncommon collection-diversifier. The Trilobite isn't a species you'll see in every collection. For keepers who enjoy the lesser-seen corners of the hobby — and who appreciate the genus's distinctive flat, shield-shaped forms — it brings real diversity and a genuine talking point.

Reliable cleanup crew. Beyond the looks, they're efficient detritivores that process decaying matter steadily, making them a useful and characterful addition to temperate bioactive setups.

How Trachelipus trilobatus Compares to Other Isopods

If you're choosing between distinctive, hardy isopods, here's how the Trilobite fits in:

  • vs Trachelipus caucasius: Both are flat, shield-shaped Trachelipus with the "trilobite" look. T. caucasius are the larger Russian/Black Sea species; the Trilobite is the Romanian species with its distinctive trilobate rear. Natural companions in a Trachelipus collection.
  • vs Trachelipus difficilis: Both are uncommon European Trachelipus. Difficilis are greyish-orange Carpathian cave-entrance dwellers; the Trilobite has the dramatic shield-like trilobite shape. Both easy and rewarding — different forms from the same genus.
  • vs Trachelipus mostarensis: Mostarensis are spotty nutty-brown Balkan isopods; the Trilobite is greyish with the prehistoric shield shape. Both undemanding genus-mates — different looks and origins.
  • vs Coros (Porcellio spatulatus): The closest lookalike in shape — both are flat, shield-like isopods. Coros are larger, dry-climate Sardinian Porcellio; the Trilobite is a smaller, moderate-humidity Romanian Trachelipus with solid colouring. Similar silhouette, different genus and care.

Browse the full Trachelipus collection for related species, or the broader isopods collection for comparison across genera.

Setting Up the Enclosure

A 6–10 litre plastic container or terrarium suits a starter colony, with room to expand as the prolific colony grows. Plastic tubs with clip-lock lids hold appropriate humidity while allowing the ventilation these isopods need. The 3L Braplast tub works well for starter colonies, with larger housing as the self-sustaining colony grows.

For ventilation, drill holes on opposite sides of the container for cross-ventilation, covered with fine mesh. Medium ventilation suits them. Provide plenty of hiding spots with cork bark, flat stones, and leaf litter — the flat, shield-shaped Trilobite likes to tuck itself under cover. The more structure you provide, the more comfortable and natural the colony. Browse our accessories collection for appropriate enclosures, vents, and other essentials.

Substrate

Use a moisture-retentive substrate that maintains a humidity gradient:

  • Organic topsoil base (pesticide-free) as the foundation
  • Sphagnum peat moss mixed throughout for moisture retention
  • Flake soil for added nutrition
  • Crushed limestone, cuttlebone, or eggshells distributed throughout for calcium
  • Pieces of rotting white wood incorporated throughout (genuinely favoured)
  • Forest moss for humidity and grazing

We recommend a topsoil and sphagnum-based mix rather than coco coir, which lacks nutritional value. Substrate depth: 5–8 cm allows for some burrowing and helps maintain stable humidity.

Top layer: Generous hardwood leaf litter — magnolia leaves and oak leaves work well for long-lasting cover and food. Add cork bark, decaying white wood, and forest moss, plus a sphagnum moss patch on one side to create the moist zone. Plenty of flat cover suits the Trilobite's shield-shaped, tuck-under nature.

Humidity and Temperature

Maintain medium humidity (around 55–70%) with a moisture gradient — keep one side more humid (with forest moss, rotting white wood, and damp leaf litter, around ⅓ of the enclosure moist at all times) while allowing the other side to stay drier. They're kept slightly damper than the dry-climate Spanish Porcellio, but still benefit from the choice a gradient provides; good ventilation prevents stagnation. As one PostPods customer noted about following the website's care guidance, getting moisture right is the key to keeping isopods successfully — a proper gradient beats a uniformly wet enclosure.

Temperature should be 15–26°C — the Trilobite is notably cold-tolerant, reflecting its Central/Eastern European origins, and handles cooler room temperatures and hard winters well. This makes it genuinely easy to keep in most UK homes without supplemental heating. It also tolerates warmer conditions within range, but avoid sustained extremes.

Diet

T. trilobatus are unfussy detritivores with no fixed diet — they'll happily work through a range of foods:

  • Primary diet (always available): Decaying leaves and hardwood leaf litter (oak, beech), rotting white wood (genuinely favoured), dried plant matter
  • Vegetables (every few days): Carrot, courgette, sweet potato, cucumber, greens. Replace within 24–48 hours.
  • Fruit (occasionally): Apple, banana — small amounts
  • Protein (1–2x weekly): Fish flakes, fish food, dried shrimp, mushrooms. They'll also consume shed invertebrate and reptile moults. Browse our accessories collection for the full range of protein supplements.
  • Calcium (essential — always available): Cuttlefish bone, crushed limestone, oyster shell, eggshells. Provide as a constant source for healthy moulting.

Feeding approach: Maintain a base of leaf litter and rotting white wood, supplementing with vegetables, occasional fruit, protein, and a constant calcium source. Use only pesticide-free supplements. Remove uneaten fresh foods within 24–48 hours to prevent mould.

Breeding

T. trilobatus are fast, prolific breeders — one of the species' genuine strengths. They reproduce reliably and build self-sustaining colonies readily under good conditions.

Breeding basics:

  • Females carry developing eggs in a marsupium and release fully-formed juveniles
  • They produce large numbers under suitable conditions
  • Established colonies increase steadily and become self-sustaining
  • Juveniles develop the distinctive shield-like trilobite shape as they mature

Conditions for breeding:

  • Stable temperatures within range (they're tolerant, but 18–22°C is ideal)
  • Medium humidity with a moisture gradient (⅓ moist at all times)
  • Adequate calcium for breeding females
  • Plenty of cover and rotting white wood
  • Consistent food availability

Their fast breeding makes them excellent for quickly building a self-sustaining colony or cleanup crew — genuinely satisfying, and forgiving of the occasional loss.

Pair With Springtails

Add a thriving springtail culture to any Trilobite 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 T. trilobatus and form an essential cleanup partnership.

Who Should Buy Trachelipus trilobatus Isopods?

Ideal for:

  • Anyone drawn to the distinctive prehistoric trilobite shape
  • Beginners wanting an easy, hardy, prolific species
  • Keepers who appreciate distinctive form over flashy colour
  • Cooler homes and rooms (they're cold-tolerant)
  • Collectors of the lesser-seen, shield-shaped Trachelipus genus
  • Those wanting a reliable, fast-breeding, self-sustaining cleanup crew
  • Temperate bioactive setups

Not ideal for:

  • Keepers wanting vivid, flashy colouration (these are understated greyish tones)
  • Anyone wanting conglobating ball-rolling species (Trachelipus can't fully roll)
  • Very dry or arid setups (they need reasonable humidity)

Realistic Expectations

The trilobite shape is the star. Set expectations toward the dramatic flat, shield-like prehistoric form rather than bold colour — that distinctive silhouette is precisely the appeal, set off by understated greyish tones with a subtle orange ring.

It's distinctive but genuinely easy. Don't be put off by how striking it looks — the Trilobite is hardy, forgiving, prolific, and beginner-friendly. A distinctive species that's actually accessible is a big part of its appeal.

It can't roll into a ball. Like other Trachelipus, the Trilobite relies on its flat shield shape, speed, and cover rather than conglobating. If you're expecting pillbug ball-rolling, this isn't that kind of isopod — but the fossil-like form is engaging in its own right.

It prefers cooler conditions and moderate humidity. As a cold-tolerant Central/Eastern European species, it's happiest at cooler room temperatures with a moisture gradient — well-suited to UK homes, and kept slightly damper than dry-climate Spanish species.

Expect fast, prolific breeding. As a quick breeder, established colonies build rapidly and sustain themselves — genuinely satisfying, and quick to become a dependable cleanup crew.

Building Your Setup

A complete Trilobite setup needs basic substrate components, calcium-rich materials, generous leaf litter and flat cover, rotting white wood, and protein supplements. Browse our accessories collection for everything you need — enclosures, ventilation, leaf litter, calcium (cuttlebone, limestone, oyster shell), and protein supplements (fish flakes, mushrooms).

Browse the full Trachelipus collection for related species like Trachelipus caucasius, Trachelipus difficilis, and Trachelipus mostarensis, or the broader isopods collection for more options across all genera.

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SKU: 14839611349

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A. Nelson
Draper, US
★★★★★ 3
Likeable characters, but only 75% complete story
Format: Kindle
I really liked the characters introduced, but the author didn’t fully conceptualize everything. We know Lila works long hours, but despite being a college graduate we never learn anything about what she does, where she works, how much she gets paid, etc. For an omega who seemed to be able to support herself, that seemed an unusual oversight. We learn absolutely nothing about what she wants in life, either. Is she just surviving the post-college life struggle or working up to her dream job? Fiona the flamingo had more detail than some of the main characters, but she was 10/10 as good as Wendy for a side character. — spoilers ahead —- Separately, some of the plot details were contradictory, or just missing. On one page Lila and Larry were together for 18 months, on another it was 4 years. When did she even move in with him? What did she do while he was gaming? How long were she and Wendy friends for Lila to trust her like that but not know much about her? And why didn’t Lila’s alphas sue Larry to reduce Lila’s debt? Shopping seemed a weird choice pamper her without knowing more about Lila’s debt and plans to reduce it. And her alphas never even ask anything about her job, but she’s The One. Such a frustrating relationship plot hole. We never even learn anything about the alphas’ families or what they want in life either. I wish the author had written about 30 more pages fleshing out the details and showing how the alphas were just as in love with Lila’s personality as they were with her scent and body. Loved the concept, but I still feel like I read 3/4 of a book.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2025
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kat
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 3
It's mid
Format: Kindle
There's a cute story there. The guys are sweet, but... I don't know. It's very vanilla. Not just the mediocre spicy scenes, but the whole story. It's just ok.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2025
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Tanya B
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
just with the book Lover ordered
Format: Kindle
This is an omega verse love story without too much angst a must read with doting alpha’s, and Omega treated like exactly how she’s supposed to be treated. This is a very sweet read not a lot of drama the chemistry between the FMC and the MMC’s is off the pages delicious.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2026
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Amber Spicer
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 4
3 Alpha Cowboys, One Omega City Girl, 3 Months of Forced Proximity - ALL The Spice
Format: Kindle
What could be better than a Cowboy Romance? How about THREE cowboys. If that Reverse Harem reveal doesn't peak your interest, what if I told you that all the cowboys are also Alphas & our FMC is an Omega? Interested yet? Thought so.... Finding out that there is an entire sub-genre (sub-sub-genre??) of non-shifter Alphas & Omega books has been a recent discovery that I am quite enjoying. Up until this last month I had only seen the Alpha / Omega trope in association with Paranormal Shifter Romance. However, this new-to-me concept introduces all the fun of Alpha & Omega pheromones, heat cycles, & knotting with no were-creature trope required. None of that unnecessary slobber or shedding found here! OK there was some shedding, but that was just from the three adorable adopted cats featured in this story. Oh, and maybe some drool on my end as I through some of the spicier scenes. The spice in this one is hotter'n a blister bug in a pepper patch -- or some other Cash approved country saying. Speaking of Cash...I'm pretty sure I need to send Harley a Thank You card for writing these spectacular men. Maybe a gift basket? How does one appropriately show gratitude to an author for creating truly exceptional male character. Which is, in fact, what all the Alphas in this book are. They hit all the book boyfriend tropes: 🩷 Cash Winslow: Your typical golden retriever cowboy. He is tall, blonde, and has a joke or "cowboy-ish" for almost any situation. 💕Scent: Fresh sage, strong coffee, old leather. 🩷 Walker Stone: Tall, dark, & broody this Cowboy is the enforcer of the group. He is also a HUGE flirt & say all the right things! 💕Scent: Cedar & Cinnamon 🩷 Ridge Colter: The stoic & reserved ginger has a heart of gold behind the walls he tries to put up. 💕Scent: Honey & Fresh Bread The FMC, Sophia Hollis, has her hands....and other places....full with these three. Fresh out of a very toxic (trigger warning) relationship with her ex-Alpha, she has no idea what it means to be truly cherished as an Omega. When she inherited the Wild Hearts Ranch, she figured she would travel from her home in Chicago to Montana, sell the ranch, and be on her way with enough cash to pay off her debts and start a new life for herself. What she didn't expect was for that inheritance to come with terms. Terms that dictate she live on the ranch for three months before she can sell. Three months.....with three hot Alphas....what could go wrong? "Three months in Montana with three Alphas, a bull named Brutus who has it out for me, and I have no idea if this small town even has a heat clinic. What could possibly go wrong?" - pg. 27 Nothing....absolutely nothing goes wrong...in fact, after reading this book I would say that things went very VERY right for her. Without giving too much away, here are just some of my top highlights & notes from the book: Instant alpha / omega scent recognition. Shirtless Cowboys.....a lot of shirtless cowboys. A guest house with a library & swinging chair. (Sadly no on-page library spice) Ranch / Animal Sanctuary. Alpha sponsored shopping trip. (Yes - Dressing Room Fun Occurred) Junk Measuring (With actual measuring tape) Late Night Stargazing Lord Weasleton of a Grandson (Seriously....somebody take this guy out back) Bull Riding & Rodeo (because....of course) Omega Heat Guard Dog Bull (Seriously his name is Bruno & he is very cranky) Adventures with Ice Cream (Mango might just be my new favorite flavor) Smutty Bookclub (That I wish I could join....seriously...the themed meetings...the costumes...LMFAO) Small Town Found Family.....and gossip Cowboy-isms Version of Truth or Dare He makes her "O" 7 times just to compete with the MMC in her bookclub book. And so much more.... For those of you wondering, the true spice starts around 50% in, but the flirting & banter builds the tension in the best of ways. If you are looking for your next Alpha / Omega Cowboys Romance I suggest you take this one for a ride.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2025
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JD
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Sweet But With Depth!
Format: Kindle
“maybe, just maybe, some things are worth chasing across the sky. Even if you never catch them.” This is a sweet, cozy OV romance—but it actually has unexpected depth. I picked this up expecting a light read with low angst. And, while I got a low angst read—it was so much more than that. It’s people piecing themselves back together after serious hurts, and learning it’s okay to be vulnerable. Learning it’s okay to allow yourself to be loved The characters are well rounded and very real, including the “broody” cowboy that could have easily been a stereotype—but was actually one of the best in the whole book. It’s got just the right level of spice, and boy is it well written! I couldn’t put it down. This is no shallow OV read, this has heart and soul. It’s absolutely beautifully written. It honestly deserves more than five stars!
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Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2025

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