SKU: 76977259094

Armadillidium Hauseni 'Triceratops' Isopods

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Description

Armadillidium Hauseni 'Triceratops' IsopodsArmadillidium hauseni widely known in the hobby as the Triceratops Isopod is one of the most genuinely distinctive Greek endemic Armadillidium species to enter the UK trade in recent years. Adults carry a prominent, shield like horned tubercle structure on the head that's the source of the dinosaur common name, and the body itself shows the heavily armoured, granulated appearance that sets it apart from the smoother members of the genus. A properly

Armadillidium hauseni — widely known in the hobby as the Triceratops Isopod — is one of the most genuinely distinctive Greek-endemic Armadillidium species to enter the UK trade in recent years. Adults carry a prominent, shield-like horned tubercle structure on the head that's the source of the dinosaur common name, and the body itself shows the heavily armoured, granulated appearance that sets it apart from the smoother members of the genus. A properly striking species, both visually and in terms of how rarely it appears in UK collections.

This is part of our wider Armadillidium collection and sits naturally alongside other Mediterranean-line species in the catalogue — particularly Armadillidium klugii 'Clown' and other granulated or patterned forms. For collectors building a focused Greek or Mediterranean Armadillidium cluster, this is one of the more visually unusual additions available.

One honest framing point up front. A. hauseni only entered the UK hobby in autumn 2024 and remains extremely scarce. Care itself is moderate intermediate — the species follows classic Armadillidium husbandry, which is forgiving by Cubaris standards but still benefits from a keeper who's worked with other isopods first. New keepers should master Porcellio scaber Dalmatian or a more common Armadillidium like A. vulgare before stepping up to a premium acquisition like this one.

Quick Care Summary

  • Scientific Name: Armadillidium hauseni
  • Common Name: Triceratops Isopod
  • Family: Armadillidiidae
  • Origin: Greece (endemic) — Mediterranean Europe
  • Adult Size: Approximately 12–18 mm (mid-sized for the genus)
  • Lifespan: 2–3 years typical
  • Difficulty: Moderate — comfortable for keepers with prior isopod experience
  • Temperature: 18–26 °C — happy at standard UK room temperature
  • Humidity: 55–70% with a clear moisture gradient — drier than most tropical isopods
  • Ventilation: Medium to high — the genus does poorly in stuffy conditions
  • Conglobation: Yes — rolls into a tight defensive ball when disturbed, classic Armadillidium behaviour
  • Appearance: Heavily granulated, armoured body with a prominent shield-like horned tubercle on the head; rugged, prehistoric look; muted grey-brown colouration with subtle granulation patterning
  • Behaviour: Slower-moving than Porcellio; classic Armadillidium temperament; rolls into a ball when disturbed rather than running
  • Breeding: Slow to establish but reliable under stable conditions; typical Mediterranean Armadillidium reproductive rate
  • Rarity: Extremely Rare in the UK hobby — only entered captive breeding in the UK in autumn 2024

What Makes 'Triceratops' Special

The horned head. The defining feature of this species is the prominent shield-like tubercle structure on the head, which gives it both its scientific recognisability and its 'Triceratops' trade name. The horn-like projection is genuinely unusual in the Armadillidium genus and sets hauseni apart from the smoother-headed species that dominate the trade. Combined with the heavily granulated body, the overall impression is distinctly prehistoric — far closer to a small living trilobite than the rounded, smooth-bodied isopods most keepers are familiar with.

The Greek endemic provenance. A. hauseni is endemic to Greece, joining the small but growing group of Greek-origin Armadillidium available in captive culture. Greek Armadillidium diversity is considerable but largely unexplored in the hobby — most cultured species in the genus come from Croatia, Italy or France — which makes any Greek-origin species a genuine geographic novelty. Authentic provenance, not a fabricated trade designation.

The new arrival to the UK hobby. This species only began entering UK captive breeding in autumn 2024, making it one of the newest Armadillidium in the UK trade. UK-bred stock is correspondingly scarce, and the species is documented as "extremely rare" across the entire UK collector community. For keepers interested in being early adopters of emerging hobby species, this is a properly meaningful acquisition.

The classic Armadillidium temperament with a distinctive look. Where some of the more visually striking isopods compromise on temperament — fast, skittish, hard to observe — A. hauseni brings the unusual appearance together with the steady, predictable behaviour of the wider Armadillidium genus. They roll into a tight ball when disturbed, move at a measured pace, and don't try to escape every time the lid comes off. Easy to observe and a sensible introduction to Mediterranean Armadillidium for a keeper who's used to Porcellio or Cubaris.

The Mediterranean Armadillidium cluster. A. hauseni sits well in a focused Mediterranean Armadillidium collection alongside Croatian A. klugii 'Clown', French A. maculatum 'Zebra' forms, and other Italian and Greek species. Together they show off how much visual and morphological diversity exists in this single genus across the Mediterranean basin.

About the Name

You'll see this species sold under two main names — worth a brief clarification.

  • Armadillidium hauseni: The formal scientific binomial. Use this name when researching in scientific or taxonomic sources.
  • 'Triceratops Isopod': The common hobby name, referring to the prominent shield-like horned tubercle on the head. The name is used widely across UK and international hobby sources and has become the de facto trade designation.

Both refer to the same animal. You may also occasionally see it referenced simply as 'Greek Triceratops' or 'Hauseni' in informal hobby contexts.

Setting Up the Enclosure

A 5–10 litre plastic container with a secure clip-lock lid suits a starter colony of 5–10 individuals. Drill ventilation holes on opposite sides for proper cross-flow, covered with fine mesh. The Armadillidium genus generally appreciates better airflow than Cubaris, so don't undersize the ventilation. Get this right and the colony establishes well; insufficient airflow is one of the more common reasons Mediterranean isopod cultures struggle.

Provide multiple hides distributed across the moisture gradient — cork bark flats, decaying hardwood pieces, flat stones, ceramic hides. Limestone and other carbonate rocks are particularly appreciated by Greek-origin Armadillidium, both as hiding spots and as a slow-release calcium source. Keep the enclosure out of direct sunlight and away from heat sources that cause humidity to swing.

Important husbandry note: Skip the standing water dish. A lightly misted moist corner provides all the moisture this species needs, and standing water in a moderate-humidity setup encourages mould without serving a real purpose. Armadillidium drink primarily from substrate moisture rather than open water sources.

Substrate

Use a free-draining, calcium-rich Mediterranean-style substrate:

  • Organic topsoil (pesticide-free) as the foundation
  • Sphagnum moss concentrated in the moist corner only — not mixed throughout
  • Composted hardwood leaf litter mixed through the upper layer
  • Crushed limestone or oyster shell distributed liberally throughout — Greek Armadillidium respond well to calcium-rich substrates
  • Small pieces of rotting hardwood as a food source and natural cover
  • A small amount of fine sand or aquarium gravel mixed in to keep the dry zone well-draining

We recommend a topsoil-based mix rather than coco coir. Substrate depth around 5–7 cm is adequate — Armadillidium are surface foragers rather than deep burrowers, so getting the moisture gradient and calcium availability right matters more than depth.

Top layer: a generous covering of hardwood leaf litter — oak, beech, hazel — plus flat limestone pieces and cork bark for cover. Maintain a clear distinction between the moist end and the dry end so the colony can self-regulate.

Humidity and Temperature

Maintain humidity around 55–70% overall, with roughly a quarter to a third of the enclosure kept consistently damp via lightly misted sphagnum, and the remaining majority allowed to dry out properly between waterings. Mediterranean Armadillidium need a clear moisture gradient rather than uniform dampness — they evolved in habitats that dry out significantly between rainfall events, and consistently wet conditions stress the colony.

Temperature should be 18–26 °C, which matches standard UK room temperature for most of the year. They handle the cooler end without difficulty, and breeding picks up modestly in the warmer half of the range. No supplementary heating is required in most heated UK homes. Avoid placement near radiators, windows or other heat sources that cause humidity to swing unpredictably.

Diet

Like the rest of the genus, A. hauseni are detritivores that accept a broad range of foods:

  • Hardwood leaf litter (oak, beech, hazel) — the dietary foundation, always available
  • Rotting hardwood pieces — important secondary nutrition source
  • Vegetables 1–2x weekly: courgette, carrot, sweet potato, squash. Replace within 24–48 hours.
  • Fruit occasionally in small amounts (apple, melon)
  • Protein 1x weekly: fish flake, dried shrimp, dried daphnia. Armadillidium have a lower protein requirement than Porcellio, so don't overdo it.
  • Calcium (essential — always available): cuttlefish bone, crushed limestone, oyster shell, eggshell. Greek Armadillidium are particularly calcium-hungry and respond well to multiple distributed sources.

Don't overfeed — uneaten fresh food spoils quickly and damages air quality. The bulk of the diet comes from substrate-borne detritus, with fresh and protein offerings as supplements rather than staples.

Breeding

Information on captive breeding for this specific species is limited given how recently it entered the UK hobby, but it follows the general pattern for Mediterranean Armadillidium — slower to establish than tropical species, but reliable once a colony settles into a stable rhythm. Females carry developing young in a brood pouch (marsupium) and release fully-formed miniature versions of the adults, which inherit the granulated body and horned head from birth.

For breeding success:

  • Stable temperature in the upper half of the range (22–25 °C tends to support better breeding rates)
  • Consistent moisture gradient — avoid wet swings or stuffy conditions
  • Abundant calcium for breeding females, with multiple distributed sources
  • Occasional protein supplementation to support reproductive output
  • Plenty of secure hides, especially flat limestone and cork bark
  • Larger starter groups establish noticeably faster than smaller ones and offer better genetic diversity — important given how narrow the current UK genetic base is
  • Patience — initial colony establishment can take several months before visible breeding begins

Because this species is so new to UK captive breeding, keeper observation contributes meaningfully to community understanding. Documented brood sizes, growth rates and other husbandry data for this species are still being established.

Who Should Buy 'Triceratops' Isopods?

Ideal for:

  • Experienced isopod keepers looking for a genuinely distinctive premium Armadillidium species
  • Collectors building a focused Mediterranean or Greek Armadillidium cluster
  • Display enthusiasts drawn to unusual armoured, prehistoric-looking isopods rather than bright colour morphs
  • Early-adopter keepers interested in species new to the UK hobby — this is one of the most recent arrivals available
  • Keepers comfortable with steady rather than prolific breeding and willing to support a slowly-establishing colony
  • Anyone interested in the morphological diversity of Armadillidium beyond the standard vulgare and klugii

Not ideal for:

  • Complete beginners — start with Porcellio scaber Dalmatian or a common Armadillidium vulgare form first
  • Keepers wanting fast colony expansion — this species breeds at typical Mediterranean Armadillidium rates, not Porcellio rates
  • Setups that run consistently damp without a proper dry zone — Mediterranean species need the gradient
  • Keepers wanting bright colour visuals — the appeal here is morphological and textural rather than chromatic
  • Anyone wanting extensive published care literature — documentation is still developing given how new this species is to the trade

Realistic Expectations

The husbandry data is still developing. Because A. hauseni only entered UK captive breeding in autumn 2024, the published care information available is limited and largely based on early keeper experience rather than long-term observation. The guidance here follows the well-established profile for Mediterranean Armadillidium, which is the appropriate baseline — but expect community understanding of this specific species to refine over the coming years.

Breeding is steady, not prolific. Plan for patient colony establishment over many months rather than rapid expansion. Mediterranean Armadillidium in general breed at a more measured pace than tropical species, and the slow growth rate is partly why A. hauseni remains rare even where it's available.

The appeal is morphological, not chromatic. The colouration is muted greys and browns, with the visual interest coming from the granulated body texture and the prominent horned head. If you're looking for vivid colour, this isn't the right species — the appeal here is the prehistoric look and the genuine rarity, not bright pigmentation.

UK availability will remain limited for some time. Given the recent introduction to UK captive breeding and the slow reproductive rate of the species, expect ongoing scarcity rather than the broad availability you'd see for established hobby species. Securing a starter colony now means starting your line at a point when the wider UK population is still genuinely small.

It's a Greek endemic, not a widely distributed species. Unlike A. vulgare and the other globally-distributed members of the genus, A. hauseni has a genuinely narrow native range restricted to Greece. The species hasn't been widely studied in the wild, which contributes to the limited published husbandry data.

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SKU: 76977259094

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4.4 ★★★★★
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Gabby M
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 4
Powerful Family History
Format: Paperback
After the birth of her son, Thi Bui feels an increased sense of urgency about learning the stories of her own parents. Like all but her youngest sibling, she was born in Vietnam, though the children came of age in the United States. While the war itself haunts all of them, was the reason they left their homeland, the wounds her parents bear go far beyond the military conflict. This was only the second graphic novel I’ve ever read (both have been memoirs), and like the first was also selected by my book club. I feel like the limitations of the format mean it will always be a less preferred one for me, because I found myself wanting more words, more depth to the writing itself. But the story is deeply compelling, detailing her father’s brutal childhood, her mother’s much softer one, how they came together, and how the Vietnam War disrupted the future they thought they might have. It’s not as straightforward as “Americans bad”, and Bui is not afraid of the moral ambiguity of that time and place, where the best interests of the majority of the Vietnamese people was an open question for larger forces that seemed to have little room for consideration of what might have actually made regular lives easier to lead. And apart from the larger geopolitical machinations around them, the family had their own share of tragedy, including the death of their first child and a later stillbirth. But three living children and another on the way was enough for her parents to make frantic arrangements to leave, finally succeeding and eventually making their way to the United States. But of course, that was not the end of their story, just the beginning of a new chapter. Bui’s childhood as she depicts it makes it clear that it wasn’t the stuff dreams are made of, but what shines through is her tremendous empathy for her parents and how they became the people she experienced them as. Overarching the narrative is a meditation on parenthood, as it is the birth of her own child that inspires her to ask her parents more. They might have made major mistakes, but it is clear that they loved their children and did what they thought was best for them, making countless sacrifices to give them the best opportunities possible, even if that love was not always shown the way that they wanted and needed to feel it. Vietnamese perspectives on the war in their country were not something I was exposed to growing up (honestly the Vietnam War itself wasn’t something I remember being taught with particular rigor in high school apart from its connection to electoral politics), and I appreciated learning more about the history of the country and how the people who actually lived through the conflict thought about it. Even though this is not my preferred format, I think Bui uses it well to engage in some non-linear storytelling and to very literally illustrate what she’s trying to get it, like the way she parallels the way her relatively rural parents must have felt seeing Saigon for the first time with the way she felt when she first moved to New York, a sense of awe and possibility. It’s a powerful, moving work and I would recommend picking it up!
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Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2026
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Riyen
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
Truly, the best we could do
Format: Kindle
An excerpt from my analysis essay I submitted for my literature course: By revisiting her family’s past from before, during, and after the Vietnam War, she gained a deeper understanding of the emotional burdens her parents carried and the sacrifices they made that defined the entirety of their lives. Bui’s illustrated graphic memoir reveals that trauma does not simply disappear over time; instead, it becomes inherited, processed, and transformed. Through this process, Thi Bui is able to move toward empathy for her parents, acceptance of who they are, and a more complete sense of self.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2026
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Kathy
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
Phenomenal. A must-read!
Format: Paperback
I first learned about this book only a week ago when visiting my sister for Thanksgiving in Eugene, Oregon. We went to the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art where I saw some work on display by the author, and there was a copy of her book available to look at, so I perused through and decided to buy it and read it. I'm so glad that I did! This is an incredible, poetic story that spans four generations, multiple wars and conflicts, and examines the fragility of the author's relationship with her parents and with her sense of place and motherhood. This book is one of the best I've read in a long time, and the art is moving and beautiful. It gave me new insight into the struggles of refugee life, and created a truly relatable narrative. I devoured this story in one Saturday. I highly recommend it.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2018
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Sav
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
A well composed memoir
Format: Paperback
Full review on nguyentoread.com The Best We Could Do is Thi Bui's graphic memoir. Thi was born in Vietnam three months before the Vietnam War reached what we consider to be the end of the war. She came to America with her family in 1978. Bui's memoir spans multiple generations. In learning of her mother's and father's pasts, we learn the history of their parents. We see the struggles and pains of two people from very different walks of life trying to live during a time of war and chaos. We see glimpses of the agony everyone in the middle of the Vietnam War faced. Those who were not directly involved on either side but were caught in the middle of larger powers at war. This memoir more closely details the lives of her parents leading up to them arriving in America and making their life there. I was unsure if this memoir would focus largely on the experience of being a Vietnamese immigrant in America. There were parts that showed how it was for Bui's parents in a country where tensions were still high after the Vietnam War, where discrimination largely due to that was overt, and where degrees were not recognized and people who had spent their lives working and creating careers for themselves were not qualified for most work and had to hurdle multiple challenges to learn a language and complete education all over again if they wanted to provide a better life for their children. What Bui so beautifully captures in this memoir is the why behind how her parents were in raising her. Although Bui was born in Vietnam she was young when her family arrived in America. So I think her experience is one that many first generation Vietnamese-American people of my generation can understand and sympathize with. The wanting to know why their parents are the way they are but unable to ask because many have parents, like Bui's mother, who reluctantly share their stories and don't allow their children that glimpse that could help them better understand. In the panel which was most poignant to me, Bui draws her father as he looks over her work that would become The Best We Could Do. He says "You know how it was for me. And why later I wouldn't be... normal."
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Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2019
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Noah Beitzel
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
This book made me love my parents more
Format: Kindle
I loved the raw depictions of vietnamese history and human emotions. I recommend this book to anyone experiencing intergenerational trauma. 5 stars, this book helped me understand my father and mother just a little more, and that is priceless
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Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2025

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