Murrmurr
SF VIP
- Location
- Sacramento, California
Recently I’ve been surprised to see that whatever food I drop into the roly-poly (isopod) house – a rotting lettuce leaf, little chunk of sweet potato, a sprinkle of fish-flakes or crushed eggshell – would disappear within a couple of hours, so I was pretty sure there were lots of them and even though there was plenty of leaf-litter and raw bark for them to munch on, I started worrying they weren’t getting enough to eat. And when that’s the case the adults will sometimes eat the young; a disturbing thought.
It’s probably stupid to worry about roly-polies but they’ve been with me for several months, I took them from their native land and I sort of feel responsible for them. I didn’t want to take them back where they came from, which is my youngest son’s house, bc the grandkids would want me to stay and visit or they’d want to come home with me and I had other plans for that day and the next, and I didn’t want to release them here bc the soil and landscape isn’t really isopod-friendly, plus an exterminator comes every month. So I called my other son’s wife (their kids are grown and gone) and asked if she would mind taking custody of my roly-polies?
She wasn’t aware that I had “pet” bugs so she was a bit taken aback and was quiet for a few seconds and then she asked me What do they do? Reasonable since she has a little veg garden and some fruit trees and a bunch of expensive plants in her yard. What isopods do is clean up. I told her they’re known as the clean-up crew of the bug world; they eat rotting, decaying stuff, mostly vegetation (but also eggshells and some other things that have calcium and protein in them).
This intrigued her bc she keeps a compost pile. She asked me if I thought they’d be happy there. Well, I think that’s a nicely symbiotic solution and I tell her so. When I transferred the isopods from their little house to the edge of the compost pile I was amazed at the number of babies and that some of the adults were huge. At least then I knew I was feeding them the right stuff but probably not enough of it. But I had no idea the colony got that big bc they hide in the substrate and under the pieces of bark and stuff. There were lots of eggs and larvae too.
Anyway, I’m sure they’ll live happily ever after in Kristine’s compost pile and they'll earn their keep for sure.
It’s probably stupid to worry about roly-polies but they’ve been with me for several months, I took them from their native land and I sort of feel responsible for them. I didn’t want to take them back where they came from, which is my youngest son’s house, bc the grandkids would want me to stay and visit or they’d want to come home with me and I had other plans for that day and the next, and I didn’t want to release them here bc the soil and landscape isn’t really isopod-friendly, plus an exterminator comes every month. So I called my other son’s wife (their kids are grown and gone) and asked if she would mind taking custody of my roly-polies?
She wasn’t aware that I had “pet” bugs so she was a bit taken aback and was quiet for a few seconds and then she asked me What do they do? Reasonable since she has a little veg garden and some fruit trees and a bunch of expensive plants in her yard. What isopods do is clean up. I told her they’re known as the clean-up crew of the bug world; they eat rotting, decaying stuff, mostly vegetation (but also eggshells and some other things that have calcium and protein in them).
This intrigued her bc she keeps a compost pile. She asked me if I thought they’d be happy there. Well, I think that’s a nicely symbiotic solution and I tell her so. When I transferred the isopods from their little house to the edge of the compost pile I was amazed at the number of babies and that some of the adults were huge. At least then I knew I was feeding them the right stuff but probably not enough of it. But I had no idea the colony got that big bc they hide in the substrate and under the pieces of bark and stuff. There were lots of eggs and larvae too.
Anyway, I’m sure they’ll live happily ever after in Kristine’s compost pile and they'll earn their keep for sure.