Isopods are beneficial soil-dwelling crustaceans commonly found in gardens where they play important ecological roles breaking down organic matter and contributing to soil health through their decomposition activities. These armor-plated creatures including familiar pillbugs (roly-polies) and sowbugs are often misunderstood as insects or pests when they’re actually harmless decomposers related to crabs and shrimp rather than bugs.
While isopods occasionally damage tender seedlings or ripening fruits touching soil, their benefits typically outweigh any minor problems they cause, making them welcome garden residents deserving protection rather than control in most situations.
What are isopods?
Isopods are crustaceans belonging to the order Isopoda, with terrestrial species including pillbugs (Armadillidium vulgare) and sowbugs (Porcellio species) being the most common garden inhabitants. These creatures are related to aquatic crustaceans including crabs, shrimp, and lobsters rather than insects, though they’ve adapted to terrestrial life. Isopods have segmented, oval bodies covered with hard exoskeleton plates, seven pairs of legs, and two pairs of antennae.
Pillbugs can roll into tight balls when threatened, earning them the nickname “roly-polies,” while sowbugs cannot roll completely but have tail-like appendages (uropods) extending from their rear ends. Most terrestrial isopods measure 1/4 to 3/4 inch in length and display gray, brown, or slate coloration. They breathe through gill-like structures requiring moisture, making them dependent on humid environments.
Isopods are primarily nocturnal detritivores feeding on decaying plant matter, contributing significantly to decomposition processes and nutrient recycling in gardens and natural ecosystems. They’re found worldwide in moist habitats and are among the few crustacean groups that have successfully colonized terrestrial environments.
Why do isopods like gardens?
Gardens provide ideal habitat conditions for isopods including moisture, shelter, and abundant food sources supporting their survival and reproduction. Moisture availability from irrigation, mulch, and soil humidity creates the damp conditions isopods require for respiration through their gill-like structures. Organic matter abundance including decaying leaves, plant debris, compost, and mulch provides their primary food sources.
Protected hiding places under rocks, boards, mulch, flowerpots, and debris offer shelter from predators, desiccation, and temperature extremes during daylight hours. Stable microclimate in garden soil and mulch layers maintains the moderate temperatures and consistent humidity isopods prefer.
Reduced disturbance in established gardens compared to tilled agricultural fields allows isopod populations to develop without constant disruption. Food diversity from various decomposing plant materials, fungi, and organic amendments creates favorable feeding conditions.
Gardens using organic mulches, maintaining consistent soil moisture, and incorporating organic matter create particularly favorable isopod habitat. Their presence indicates healthy soil ecosystems with active decomposition processes. While they occasionally damage tender plants, isopods’ contributions to soil health through organic matter breakdown and nutrient cycling make them beneficial garden inhabitants whose presence reflects good garden management practices supporting soil biology.
Lifecycle of isopods
Isopods reproduce sexually with females carrying fertilized eggs in a brood pouch (marsupium) on their undersides where eggs develop protected from environmental stresses. Females produce 20-200 eggs per brood depending on species and conditions, with 1-3 broods annually. Development within the pouch takes 3-7 weeks, with miniature versions of adults emerging fully formed rather than undergoing metamorphosis like insects.
Juvenile isopods remain near mothers initially, gradually dispersing and molting repeatedly as they grow. Isopods molt in two stages, first shedding the posterior half of their exoskeleton, then the anterior half several days later—a unique molting pattern among terrestrial arthropods. They undergo 10-15 molts before reaching sexual maturity at 3-4 months.
Adult isopods live 2-5 years depending on species and environmental conditions, considerably longer than most similar-sized invertebrates. This longevity combined with their reproductive capacity allows isopod populations to build gradually in suitable habitats. Their slow development and long lifespan mean population changes occur gradually rather than explosively, contributing to stable beneficial presence in established gardens without sudden outbreak problems.
What do isopods eat?
Isopods are primarily detritivores feeding on decaying plant material including dead leaves, rotting wood, decomposing roots, and organic mulch. They consume fungi, algae, and moss growing on various surfaces. Isopods occasionally eat living plant tissues including tender seedlings, ripening strawberries touching soil, and succulent plant parts when preferred decaying matter is scarce.
They also consume their own feces (coprophagy), extracting additional nutrients through multiple digestion passes. Some species eat dead insects and other animal matter. Their feeding breaks down organic materials into smaller particles, facilitating further decomposition by bacteria and fungi while releasing nutrients back into soil cycles.
Are isopods edible?
Yes, some isopod species are edible and consumed in various cultures, though terrestrial garden isopods are rarely eaten due to their small size. Giant marine isopods and some aquatic species are considered delicacies in certain cuisines. Terrestrial pillbugs and sowbugs are technically edible and reportedly taste similar to shrimp when cooked, though they’re impractical food sources given their size and potential contamination from garden environments.
They’re primarily composed of protein and chitin. However, consuming garden isopods isn’t recommended due to potential pesticide exposure, parasites, and bacteria they may carry. Some survival guides mention them as emergency food, but they’re not part of normal culinary traditions in most cultures.
How do you know if you have an isopod infestation?
Isopod presence in gardens is normal and beneficial rather than problematic, though high populations create recognizable signs:
- Numerous individuals under objects: You might discover dozens or hundreds of gray, armored creatures congregating under boards, pots, rocks, or mulch when these items are lifted.
- Roly-poly behavior when disturbed: It’s common to see pillbugs rolling into tight balls when exposed, while sowbugs scurry away without rolling completely.
- Damage to tender seedlings: You’re likely to notice young plants with chewed leaves or stems near soil level where isopod feeding has damaged vulnerable tissues.
- Fruit damage near ground: You might find strawberries, tomatoes, or other produce touching soil showing feeding damage from isopod activity on ripening crops.
- Presence in damp mulched areas: It’s common to observe isopods primarily in heavily mulched, consistently moist garden areas where conditions favor their survival.
- Nocturnal surface activity: You might see isopods crawling on soil surfaces, mulch, or plant bases during evening hours when they emerge from daytime hiding places.
How to prevent an isopod infestation?
Preventing isopods involves creating less favorable habitat conditions, though their beneficial role suggests tolerance is often preferable:
- Reduce mulch depth near plants: Maintain thinner mulch layers (1-2 inches) around vulnerable seedlings reducing daytime hiding places adjacent to tender plants.
- Improve drainage and reduce moisture: Allow soil to dry between waterings and fix drainage problems creating excessively wet conditions that concentrate isopod populations.
- Remove debris and hiding places: Clear boards, rocks, and accumulated plant debris from garden areas eliminating protected daytime refuges where isopods congregate.
- Elevate ripening fruits: Use straw, supports, or trellises keeping strawberries and other susceptible fruits off soil surfaces away from isopod access.
- Consider welcoming them instead: Recognize isopods as beneficial decomposers improving soil health and only implement control measures if damage is actually occurring rather than preventing harmless populations.
When to call a professional
When dealing with garden pest problems where you need expert assessment distinguishing beneficial organisms like isopods from genuine pest species causing plant damage, professional pest control services can provide accurate identification and integrated pest management solutions. At Aptive, our pest control experts understand the beneficial roles that decomposers including isopods play in garden ecosystems and can help determine whether observed damage is actually from isopods or from other garden pests.
If you’re experiencing unexplained seedling damage and need help determining whether isopods or other pests are responsible, want guidance on managing garden conditions that concentrate isopod populations in problematic areas, or need comprehensive integrated pest management addressing multiple garden pest issues while preserving beneficial organisms, don’t wait—contact Aptive today for a free quote.









