Live Arrival GuaranteeCarefully PackedShipped Across CanadaHealthy, carefully packed invertebrates shipped across Canada!Live Arrival GuaranteeCarefully PackedShipped Across CanadaHealthy, carefully packed invertebrates shipped across Canada!Live Arrival GuaranteeCarefully PackedShipped Across CanadaHealthy, carefully packed invertebrates shipped across Canada!
← All care guides
IntermediateBlonde Ducky Isopods

Blonde Ducky Isopods Care Guide

Cubaris sp. "Blonde Ducky"

How we keep Blonde Ducky Isopods: ventilation, humidity, limestone, and what to do when something goes wrong.

About Blonde Ducky Isopods

Blonde Duckies are a lighter Rubber Ducky locale: blonde-yellow head and tail with a grey-brown band in the middle. Same duck-shaped head and same Cubaris husbandry.

Cubaris sp. "Blonde Ducky" is a Cubaris from Southeast Asia. Like the rest of the genus, they want humid air that still moves, plenty of leaf litter, and calcium on tap. They breed slower than Porcellio, but the colour and behaviour are worth the wait if you are patient.

Morph-specific notes

Often pricier and slower than Panda morphs. Let them settle for the first 3 months before rehousing.

Housing & enclosure setup

Cubaris need good airflow. Stale air is the most common reason a colony crashes. A ventilated 6 US quart (~5.7 L) tub with holes along the sides and lid is what most keepers start with. Glass works for display too, as long as air can move through.

Give them 5–8 cm (2–3 in) of substrate. Cork bark, leaf litter, and limestone pieces help them hide and pick their own micro-climate. They are shy; poking the tub every day slows breeding.

Substrate & environment

Mix coconut coir or peat with aged hardwood, crushed limestone, and a thick cap of oak or magnolia leaves. Limestone (or crushed coral) matters here. Cubaris use more calcium than most temperate isopods.

Keep one side of the tub moist. The other can dry out a little, but do not let the whole thing go bone dry.

Temperature & humidity

  • Temperature: 22–26°C (72–80°F). Try not to let them sit below 18°C or above 28°C for long.
  • Humidity: 70–80% with airflow. Wet substrate plus no ventilation leads to mould and suffocation.
  • Mist the moist side 2–3× per week, or whenever the gradient starts to fade.

Diet & nutrition

Staple: Oak and magnolia leaf litter, plus decaying hardwood.

Supplements (1–2× weekly):

  • Vegetables: squash, carrot, cucumber (pull leftovers within 24–48 hours)
  • Protein: fish flakes, dried shrimp, isopod diet mix (small amounts)
  • Calcium: limestone, cuttlebone, or crushed coral. Leave a piece in at all times.

Go easy on protein. Extra food rots fast in humid tubs.

Breeding & colony management

Cubaris breed slowly compared to Porcellio. Broods are often small (5–15 mancae). Females carry young in a marsupium; babies hatch out looking like tiny adults.

  • Try not to rehouse constantly. Wait until you see juveniles moving around regularly.
  • Give a new culture 6–12 months before you harvest heavily.
  • Do not pack the tub too full. Overcrowding stresses adults and can lead to cannibalism.

Common issues & troubleshooting

Colony crash / mass die-off

  • Usually stale air or foul, anaerobic substrate. Open up ventilation, replace bad substrate, and move survivors to a fresh setup right away.

Mould outbreaks

  • Cut back on protein, add springtails, improve airflow, and remove mouldy food.

Failed moults / pale, lethargic isopods

  • Often a calcium problem. Add limestone and cuttlebone; check that the substrate is not too acidic.

No breeding after months

  • They may still be settling in, or the tub is too dry or cold. Check humidity and temperature, and leave them alone for a while.

Mites

  • Usually grain mites from overfeeding. Feed less, dry the tub out slightly, and add springtails. Split off heavily infested cultures if needed.

Species using this guide

Shop the isopods and springtails covered by this guide.

Blonde Ducky Isopods

Blonde Ducky Isopods

Cubaris sp. "Blonde Ducky"

$85.008 count$95.00