Armadillidae
Guides
Cubaris
Reclined Pill Woodlice
Cubaris is a genus of woodlice (terrestrial isopods) in the family Armadillidae, established in 1833 with Cubaris murina as the type species. The genus contains more than 100 described species, though it has become a wastebasket taxon with many species placed in it that do not fit the original description. Species in this genus are capable of conglobation (rolling into a ball) and have been widely used in ecotoxicity testing due to their sensitive behavioral responses to soil contaminants. Several Cubaris species, particularly undescribed forms such as "Rubber Ducky," have become popular in the pet trade.
Venezillo pisum
Venezillo pisum is a species of terrestrial isopod in the family Armadillidae, first described by Budde-Lund in 1885. The specific epithet 'pisum' (Latin for 'pea') likely refers to some aspect of its appearance or behavior, though the original description's reasoning is not preserved in available sources. As a member of the Oniscidea (woodlice and pill bugs), it is a detritivore inhabiting moist terrestrial environments. The species has been recorded in North America, though it may represent an introduced population given its original description from European material.