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Porcellio hoffmannseggii 'Yeti' Isopods for Sale

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Description

Porcellio hoffmannseggii 'Yeti' Isopods for SalePorcellio hoffmannseggii 'Yeti' is a spectacular pale colour morph of the famous Titan isopod one of the largest terrestrial isopods kept in the hobby displayed here in a striking white to pale form that earns it the "Yeti" name. Where the standard Titan shows grey colouration with characteristic white skirting, the Yeti morph is pale and frosted across its large, robust body, combining genuinely impressive size with a clean, snowy appearance for a

Porcellio hoffmannseggii 'Yeti' is a spectacular pale colour morph of the famous Titan isopod — one of the largest terrestrial isopods kept in the hobby — displayed here in a striking white-to-pale form that earns it the "Yeti" name. Where the standard Titan shows grey colouration with characteristic white skirting, the Yeti morph is pale and frosted across its large, robust body, combining genuinely impressive size with a clean, snowy appearance for a properly commanding display species. Reaching an impressive 4 cm, these are substantial, heavily-built isopods native to the rocky Mediterranean regions of Spain — and the pale Yeti colouration makes an already flagship species even more eye-catching.

What makes the Yeti morph particularly worth keeping is the combination: the impressive size and hardiness of the Titan paired with the clean, frosted pale colouration that makes them a genuine centrepiece. They retain everything that makes hoffmannseggii a flagship large Porcellio — substantial presence, robust build, deep-burrowing behaviour, and extended maternal care — while the pale colouration gives them standout visual impact. They complete the Titan morph family alongside the standard Titan (P. hoffmannseggii), the White Antenna, and the Orange morphs, sitting among the premium giant Porcellio with cousins like P. magnificus and P. expansus 'Orange'.

One crucial point that defines their care: unlike the humid forest floors many isopods prefer, hoffmannseggii naturally inhabit rocky, arid, cliffside Mediterranean environments. This gives them care requirements that run genuinely counter to typical isopod husbandry — they prefer drier, well-ventilated conditions (30–50% humidity) that would actually stress humidity-loving species. They cannot tolerate high humidity or temperature extremes, so keepers accustomed to tropical isopods need to consciously resist the urge to keep things moist. They are not beginner-friendly pets.

Like all Porcellio, they cannot conglobate — their flat body shape prevents rolling into a complete ball. Instead they rely on size, speed, and burrowing deep into the substrate. Interestingly, their genetics mean a Yeti colony can produce offspring in a range of colours, which is part of what makes breeding them so engaging.

Quick Care Summary

  • Scientific Name: Porcellio hoffmannseggii 'Yeti'
  • Common Names: Yeti Titan, Hoffmannseggii Yeti, White Titan Isopod
  • Family: Porcellionidae
  • Origin: Spain — rocky, arid cliffside Mediterranean regions
  • Adult Size: Up to 4 cm (40 mm) — one of the largest hobby isopods
  • Lifespan: 2–3 years typical
  • Difficulty: Medium — dry husbandry and size need managing; not beginner-friendly
  • Temperature: 20–26°C (UK room temperature works year-round)
  • Humidity: 30–50% — significantly drier than most isopods
  • Ventilation: High — strong airflow essential
  • Conglobation: No — flat-bodied Porcellio, relies on size, speed and burrowing
  • Behaviour: Deep burrower, nocturnal but visible, active
  • Breeding: Steady; average brood sizes; produces varied-colour offspring; extended maternal care

What Makes Yeti Titan Isopods Special

Several factors make the Yeti morph a coveted giant Porcellio:

Impressive Titan size. At up to 4 cm, hoffmannseggii are among the largest terrestrial isopods you can keep — substantial, robust, and genuinely commanding. The Yeti morph retains every bit of this impressive scale, making them a true centrepiece display species rather than background cleanup crew.

Clean, frosted pale colouration. The Yeti morph replaces the standard grey-and-white-skirting with a pale, snowy, frosted look across the large body, creating dramatic visual impact. Combined with the size, the pale colour makes them a genuine centrepiece — few isopods combine this scale with this clean, distinctive appearance.

Fascinating colour genetics. A notable feature of the Yeti is that its genetics can produce offspring in a range of colours — so a breeding colony can be genuinely interesting to observe as juveniles develop. It adds an extra dimension for keepers interested in colour and breeding projects.

Deep-burrowing behaviour. The Yeti is fond of burrowing deep into the substrate, spending much of its time below the surface. Providing the depth they crave makes for a more natural, content colony and genuinely interesting behaviour to observe when they do surface.

Extended maternal care. Females show notable protective behaviour toward their offspring, guarding them through their first two moults — a longer parental investment than most Porcellio species display. It's a genuinely interesting trait to observe.

Thrives where others can't. Their dry-climate adaptation means they flourish in arid, well-ventilated conditions that would stress humidity-loving species — making them genuinely useful for arid bioactive setups and desert-reptile enclosures, not just attractive.

Flagship collector species. As a pale morph of the giant Titan, they belong among the most prized large Porcellio. For collectors building a giant-Porcellio collection, the Yeti completes the Titan morph family alongside the standard, White Antenna, and Orange forms.

How Yeti Titan Compares to Other Giant Porcellio

If you're choosing between large Spanish Porcellio, here's how the Yeti morph fits in:

  • vs Standard Titan (P. hoffmannseggii): Same species, identical care — the choice is purely aesthetic. Standard Titans show the classic grey body and white skirting; the Yeti is pale and frosted. Keep them separate to preserve each morph's appearance.
  • vs White Antenna Titan: Another hoffmannseggii morph — same species, different distinctive feature. White Antenna show grey bodies with striking pale antennae; the Yeti is pale all over. Both flagship Titan morphs — collectors often want the full set.
  • vs Orange Titan: The warm-toned counterpart to the Yeti's cool pale look — same species, opposite colour expressions. Orange blazes warm; Yeti is frosted white. Together they show the striking range within the Titan morphs.
  • vs Porcellio magnificus: Another spectacular large Spanish species. Both are premium giant Porcellio for serious collectors with similar dry husbandry — magnificus for its bold orange, Yeti Titan for the clean pale look on the robust Titan build.

Browse the full Porcellio collection to compare all species in this genus.

Physical Traits and Characteristics

  • Adults reach up to 4 cm in length — substantial for terrestrial isopods
  • Pale, frosted white-toned colouration across the body
  • Robust, heavily built body with a hard, segmented exoskeleton
  • Cannot conglobate — body shape prevents rolling
  • Easily distinguished by the length of the tail (uropods)
  • Genetics can produce offspring in a range of colours

Critical Setup Requirement — Dry and Well-Ventilated

Getting the enclosure right means understanding their preference for drier, well-ventilated conditions — genuinely the key husbandry point. A common and damaging mistake is keeping the enclosure too moist; these isopods come from arid, cliffside Mediterranean environments, and uniform high humidity causes problems. They cannot tolerate high humidity.

The correct approach is a dry setup with a small moist zone:

  • Keep the majority of the enclosure dry (around 30–50% humidity overall)
  • Maintain one smaller moist corner with damp sphagnum moss
  • Don't let the substrate become completely bone-dry throughout — a moist retreat matters
  • High ventilation — strong airflow prevents humidity building up
  • Let them self-regulate by moving between the moist and dry zones, and by burrowing

As one PostPods customer noted about following the website's care guidance for dry-climate Porcellio, proper instructions prevent the most common fatal mistake — too much moisture. If you've kept humidity-loving isopods, consciously resist the urge to keep things damp. When in doubt, err drier and increase airflow — but always keep that one small moist retreat available.

Setting Up the Enclosure

Given their size, provide a roomy, well-ventilated enclosure — a standard large terrarium of at least 15 litres for a starter colony, larger for established groups. Cross-ventilation matters: multiple ventilation points on different sides work better than a single mesh lid, helping maintain the dry, fresh-air conditions they require. The 3L Braplast tub suits only the smallest starter groups; this species benefits from significantly more room and depth.

As dedicated deep burrowers, they need a generous depth of substrate to dig into. Provide cork bark and flat bark pieces for surface cover too, and keep the enclosure out of direct sunlight. Browse our accessories collection for appropriate enclosures, ventilation, and other essentials.

Substrate

Use a substrate suited to their drier requirements and deep-burrowing nature:

  • Organic topsoil as a base (pesticide-free)
  • Sphagnum moss mixed in (and concentrated in the moist corner)
  • Sand for improved drainage and authentic Mediterranean texture
  • Crushed limestone or calcium powder distributed throughout
  • Flake soil for added nutrition
  • Plenty of hardwood leaves and decaying wood for continuous nutrition

Substrate depth: a generous 8–10 cm or more — they're enthusiastic deep burrowers and genuinely use the depth. Keep the bulk drier with one moist corner; don't let the whole substrate become bone-dry, but don't keep it uniformly damp either.

Top layer: A layer of hardwood magnolia leaves and oak leaves as supplementary cover and food, plus decaying wood and bark. Distribute calcium sources throughout.

Temperature

20–26°C suits their Spanish Mediterranean origins. Importantly, they cannot tolerate temperature extremes — avoid both cold snaps and excessive heat (and don't let the enclosure overheat, as sustained high temperatures stress them). Room temperature in most UK homes works well, but monitor during very hot or cold weather. A low-wattage heat mat on the side (never underneath) connected to a thermostat can help maintain steady warmth in cooler homes.

Diet

Despite their impressive size, hoffmannseggii consume relatively little — don't overfeed. They have a genuine preference for decaying wood, plus higher protein and calcium needs than many isopods:

  • Primary diet (always available): Dead organic matter, decaying hardwood (genuinely favoured), rotten leaves, hardwood leaf litter
  • Protein (important — offer regularly): Dried shrimp, fish food, dried insects. Their protein needs are higher than many isopod species and regular supplementation supports growth, moulting, and breeding. Browse our accessories collection for the full range of protein supplements.
  • Calcium (essential — their main dietary need, always available): Cuttlefish bone, crushed limestone, calcium carbonate, eggshells. Their large size means significant calcium demands for healthy moulting — provide as a constant source.
  • Vegetables (occasionally): Carrot, courgette, squash in small amounts. Replace within 24–48 hours.

Feeding approach: Despite their size, they don't consume large quantities — offer amounts they can finish to avoid waste and mould, and remove uneaten fresh foods within 24–48 hours. Overfeeding is a common mistake with this species.

Breeding

Breeding hoffmannseggii is straightforward once conditions are right, producing offspring quickly and easily with average brood sizes.

Sexing: Males have noticeably longer uropods (tail sections) than females and tend to be broader and more robust.

Breeding requirements:

  • Stable temperature within range (20–26°C, no extremes)
  • Appropriate dry setup with a small moist corner (30–50% humidity)
  • Good ventilation and generous substrate depth for burrowing
  • Sufficient protein and calcium for gravid females

Maternal care: Females carry developing young in their marsupium and release fully-formed juveniles, then protect them through their first two moults — longer parental investment than many isopods show.

Colour genetics: A particularly interesting feature of the Yeti is that its genetics can produce offspring in a range of colours, making each brood genuinely engaging to watch as juveniles develop and mature.

Pair With Springtails (Carefully)

Springtails can help manage mould in the moist corner of a Yeti setup, but the predominantly dry conditions don't suit large springtail populations. A modest springtail culture concentrated in the moist zone provides cleanup around fresh foods without requiring the high humidity springtails typically prefer. In a genuinely dry, well-ventilated enclosure, springtails play a smaller role than in tropical setups.

Who Should Buy Yeti Titan Isopods?

Ideal for:

  • Keepers wanting large, impressive isopods with a clean pale look
  • Collectors seeking hoffmannseggii morphs or building a giant-Porcellio collection
  • Those maintaining arid or semi-arid bioactive setups
  • Bioactive setups for desert-dwelling reptiles
  • Keepers with some experience ready to manage a dry-specialist species
  • Anyone interested in the varied-colour offspring genetics

Not ideal for:

  • Complete beginners — start with hardier species like Dairy Cow or P. scaber first
  • High-humidity tropical setups (their dry needs run counter to this)
  • Shallow enclosures without room to burrow deep
  • Anyone unable to provide strong ventilation and a mostly-dry setup
  • Keepers wanting conglobating ball-rolling species (Porcellio can't roll)

Realistic Expectations

The single most important point: keep them drier than most isopods, but not bone-dry. Their dry requirements run counter to typical isopod husbandry advice — keepers accustomed to humidity-loving species need to resist the urge to keep things moist. A mostly-dry enclosure with one small moist corner and strong ventilation is what they need. They can't tolerate high humidity, but they also shouldn't be kept completely arid throughout. When uncertain, err drier while keeping that moist retreat.

They burrow deep. Expect to see them less than surface-dwelling species — they spend much of their time below ground, so provide generous substrate depth and don't be alarmed when they're hidden. Deep burrowing is normal, healthy behaviour.

They can't roll into a ball. Unlike Armadillidium, hoffmannseggii are flat-bodied Porcellio relying on size, speed, and burrowing for defence. If you're expecting pillbug ball-rolling, this isn't that kind of isopod — but their size and behaviour are engaging in a different way.

Offspring colours vary. Thanks to their genetics, a Yeti colony can produce juveniles in a range of colours — part of what makes them interesting to breed and observe.

They're not beginner pets. Rated Medium difficulty, they need dry husbandry, strong ventilation, depth to burrow, and stable temperatures. Care is identical across the hoffmannseggii morphs — the choice between Yeti, standard, White Antenna, and Orange is purely aesthetic. If keeping multiple morphs, maintain separate colonies to preserve each variant's appearance.

Building Your Setup

A complete Yeti Titan setup needs a roomy, well-ventilated enclosure, a deep drier substrate with sand and limestone, abundant calcium, plenty of decaying hardwood and bark, and regular protein. Browse our accessories collection for everything you need — large ventilated enclosures, leaf litter, calcium (cuttlebone, limestone, calcium carbonate), and protein supplements.

Browse the full Porcellio collection for related giant species and the other Titan morphs, or read our blog post on the different types of Porcellio isopods for more on this varied and rewarding genus.

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