Pill bugs are sometimes referred to as rollie pollies.
Bugs that roll up when touched.
When you turn over a rock old board mulch or leaf litter in your yard you may see a bunch of small slate gray buglike creatures that resemble miniature armadillos.
Most kids have poked a pill bug to watch it roll up into a tight ball.
The first woodlice were marine isopods which are presumed to have colonised land in the carboniferous.
This tell tale position is actually a symptom of an ailing bug s decreased coordination and failing.
Lying on their back legs sticking up in the air.
Pill bugs eat their own poop.
They have many common names and although often referred to as terrestrial isopods some species live semiterrestrially or have.
These insects have a hard layered shell which looks something like armadillo skin and 14 legs.
With winter rains bay area pill bugs are out in force.
A woodlouse plural woodlice is a crustacean from the monophyletic suborder oniscidea within the isopods this name is descriptive of their being found in old wood.
They feed on vegetation and rotting matter and can be seen scurrying toward cover under rocks or leaves.
Armadillidium vulgare is the most common species in the u s.
These flat 1 4 or smaller insects usually live under rocks or logs.
Dead or dying insects assume a familiar pose.
This ability gives woodlice in this family their common names of pill bugs or roly polies.
This name is due to the fact that the pill bug can roll up into a tight ball when disturbed.
When harassed they ball up to protect themselves.
Roly poly bug facts.
Bug rolling in when touched.
Armadillidiidae is a family of woodlice a terrestrial crustacean group in the order isopoda unlike members of other woodlouse families members of this family can roll into a ball an ability they share with the outwardly similar but unrelated pill millipedes and other animals.
Pill bugs live around the world.
In fact many people call them roly polies for just this reason.
If you have an infestation read below to find out how to get rid of pill bugs.
Video by josh cassidy kqed.