Here is a great example of why you should quarantine your wild caught isopods and breed them out for a generation or two before feeding them to your other inverts or reptiles/amphibians.
This is a parasitic worm that was found in a Porcellio sp. It appeared possible that the worm could infect a larger animal if it were to eat the isopod but I do not yet have taxonomic info on the species of worm and this is the first parasite of this type that I have encountered. The only indication that the isopod had the worm was the swollen stomach which made it appear gravid. Upon closer inspection I believe it would have been possible to distinguish between a swollen stomach from a marsupium filled with baby isopods but I did not look at the isopod under magnification and only noted the worm after it had vacated the isopod and was squirming around in the quarantine jar.
You can see from the last photo that the worm vacated the isopod below cepholothroax and this injury was the cause of death of the isopod. The worm was kept in the quarantine jar for observation for several days and was then euthanize.
This is a parasitic worm that was found in a Porcellio sp. It appeared possible that the worm could infect a larger animal if it were to eat the isopod but I do not yet have taxonomic info on the species of worm and this is the first parasite of this type that I have encountered. The only indication that the isopod had the worm was the swollen stomach which made it appear gravid. Upon closer inspection I believe it would have been possible to distinguish between a swollen stomach from a marsupium filled with baby isopods but I did not look at the isopod under magnification and only noted the worm after it had vacated the isopod and was squirming around in the quarantine jar.



You can see from the last photo that the worm vacated the isopod below cepholothroax and this injury was the cause of death of the isopod. The worm was kept in the quarantine jar for observation for several days and was then euthanize.