Armadillidium maculatum is considered average sized for its genus and can reach sizes of up to 18 millimeters or 11/16 inches. Like other members of its family, it can
conglobate or roll into a ball when disturbed or to conserve moisture. Its striped appearance is thought to be an example of
Batesian mimicry, mimicking the pill millipede
Glomeris marginata which secretes noxious chemicals and is native to the same range.
Armadillidium maculatum, like all other
isopods, have 7 pairs of legs and 7 main body segments (
pleon) Being an
arthropod,
A. maculatum has an exoskeleton which it must shed (
molt) as it grows. Unlike most other arthropods,
A. maculatum sheds its exoskeleton in two halves, one at a time (biphasic molting). It is theorized that isopods do this to maintain partial mobility while they are molting and vulnerable. After mating, a female individual will keep fertilized eggs in an egg-pouch on the underside of her body called the
marsupium. After a few weeks, the eggs will emerge from the marsupium as
mancae in amounts as many as a hundred babies at a time, though estimates vary depending on age and size of the individual. The species name "maculatum" in
Armadillidium maculatum is derived from the Latin term "maculatus", meaning "spotted", referring to the spotted coloration (or "morph") of the natural specimen as opposed to the striped morph in captivity. == Ecology ==