Amber Ducky Isopods (Cubaris sp.)
SKU: 49624887824

Amber Ducky Isopods (Cubaris sp.)

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Description

Amber Ducky Isopods (Cubaris sp.)The Amber Ducky is one of the most visually warming Cubaris species in the UK hobby a Thai species defined by its honey golden body with orange and warm brown tones, often accented with two darker pereons (body segments) toward the rear that create a striking gradient effect. The colour evokes fossilised tree resin, hence the "Amber" name, and the "Ducky" reflects their relationship to the famous Rubber Ducky line. Where Rubber Duckies trade on their

The Amber Ducky is one of the most visually warming Cubaris species in the UK hobby — a Thai species defined by its honey-golden body with orange and warm brown tones, often accented with two darker pereons (body segments) toward the rear that create a striking gradient effect. The colour evokes fossilised tree resin, hence the "Amber" name, and the "Ducky" reflects their relationship to the famous Rubber Ducky line. Where Rubber Duckies trade on their iconic shell shape, Amber Duckies trade on warm, glowing colouration that genuinely catches the light.

For keepers stepping up from beginner species into the world of Cubaris, Amber Duckies are one of the smartest choices available. They're more forgiving than premium Cubaris species like Rubber Duckies or Lemon Blues, while still offering the slow, deliberate elegance that makes Cubaris keeping rewarding. They breed reliably once established, and they're notably bolder and more visible than many Cubaris species — meaning you'll actually see them rather than just knowing they exist.

Available in groups of 5, 10, or 20. Captive-bred stock from established UK colonies. Mixed sizes included to establish a balanced colony with breeding potential.

Quick Care Summary

  • Scientific Name: Cubaris sp. 'Amber Ducky'
  • Common Names: Amber Ducky Isopod, Cubaris Amber Ducky
  • Family: Armadillidae
  • Origin: Thailand — tropical rainforests and mangrove habitats
  • Adult Size: Up to 20 mm
  • Lifespan: 2–3 years typical
  • Difficulty: Easy to Medium — beginner-friendly within the Cubaris genus
  • Temperature: 21–28°C (23–27°C optimal for breeding)
  • Humidity: 65–80% with moisture gradient
  • Ventilation: Low to medium — humidity retention prioritised
  • Behaviour: Conglobates (rolls into a ball), nocturnal, bolder than many Cubaris
  • Breeding: Reliable once established — among the more forgiving Cubaris breeders

What Makes Amber Ducky Isopods Special

Several factors make Amber Duckies one of the more rewarding entry-level Cubaris species:

The colouration is genuinely warm. Most isopods sit in cool tones — black, grey, white, brown. Amber Duckies bring proper warmth: gold, honey, orange, amber. The two darker pereons toward the rear create a gradient that catches the light, giving them an almost luminous quality in good lighting. This is especially noticeable against dark substrate and leaf litter.

More visible than typical Cubaris. Many Cubaris species are notoriously shy — you can have a thriving colony and rarely see anyone. Amber Duckies are bolder. They'll explore their enclosure during dim conditions and don't disappear at the first sign of disturbance. For display setups where you actually want to observe your animals, this matters significantly.

Reliable breeding. Where some premium Cubaris breed slowly and unpredictably, Amber Duckies establish reliably and produce broods steadily once settled. Within 3–6 months of stable conditions, you'll see new mancae appearing. Within a year, a starter colony of 5–10 will be a thriving population. This makes them genuine breeding projects rather than static display animals.

Excellent stepping stone. If you've kept hardy beginner isopods like Dairy Cows and want to explore Cubaris without committing to demanding species, Amber Duckies are the ideal next step. Care requirements teach you the Cubaris approach (warmth, humidity balance, calcium emphasis) without the precision husbandry that premium morphs demand.

Conglobation. Like all Cubaris, Amber Duckies roll into a tight ball when disturbed. The conglobation behaviour combined with their warm colouration makes them genuinely engaging to observe and interact with.

How Amber Ducky Compares to Other Cubaris

If you're choosing between Cubaris species, here's how Amber Duckies fit in:

  • vs Panda King: Both are gateway Cubaris species suitable for stepping up from beginner stock. Panda Kings have black-and-white panda patterning; Amber Duckies have warm gold-and-orange tones. Both breed reliably. Choose based on which colour palette you prefer — cool contrast or warm glow.
  • vs Jupiter Isopods: Jupiters have segment-by-segment yellow outlines on dark bodies; Amber Duckies have warm gradient colouration. Similar care, similar accessibility within the Cubaris genus. Both are good entry-level Cubaris.
  • vs Rubber Ducky: Rubber Duckies are the famous "duck-faced" Cubaris with the iconic shell shape. They're larger, more expensive, and slower-breeding. Amber Duckies share the "Ducky" name and Cubaris genetics but offer different visual appeal (warm colouration vs distinctive shape) at a more accessible price point.
  • vs Lemon Blue: Lemon Blues are more demanding (Hard difficulty, slower breeding, colour fades without carotenoid feeding). Amber Duckies are more forgiving and don't require the same precision feeding regime to maintain their colouration.

Setting Up the Enclosure

A 6–10 litre tub or small glass enclosure suits a starter colony of 5–10. Plastic tubs with clip-lock lids work particularly well — they hold humidity better than glass terrariums, which matters for tropical Cubaris.

Ventilation should be low to medium. Amber Duckies need humid conditions but not stagnant air. Small holes on opposite sides of the enclosure provide cross-ventilation without dropping humidity. Avoid wide mesh sections — they dry the enclosure out too quickly. Browse our accessories collection for appropriate enclosures, vents, and other essentials.

Substrate

Build a layered substrate that matches Amber Ducky's tropical Thai origins:

Base layer (5–7 cm minimum): Organic topsoil mixed with forest humus or coconut coir. Mix in sphagnum peat moss for moisture retention and nutritional substrate components like fermented hardwood. Substrate depth matters — Cubaris burrow during moulting and breeding, and adequate depth supports healthy colony behaviour.

Calcium throughout: Cubaris come from limestone-rich tropical environments. Mix crushed limestone or cuttlebone pieces throughout the substrate, not just placed on top. Calcium availability directly affects moulting health and breeding success.

Middle layer: Pieces of rotting white hardwood and mushroom-mycelium substrate. Both provide food value and structural complexity. Tropical Cubaris actively feed on fungal-decomposed wood — this isn't decoration, it's diet.

Top layer: Generous leaf litter using long-lasting hardwood leaves like magnolia, oak, beech, or maple. Add cork bark hides spread throughout the enclosure — Amber Duckies use multiple hides actively for shelter and moulting. Sphagnum moss patches in corners help maintain localised humidity zones.

Humidity and the Moisture Gradient

Maintain humidity at 65–80%. Mist regularly to keep the substrate consistently moist. The moss patches and limited ventilation help retain moisture between misting sessions.

Create a moisture gradient rather than uniform humidity:

  • Damper side (about half): Moist substrate with sphagnum moss patches and damp leaf litter. This is where breeding females will tend to congregate and where moulting happens.
  • Drier side (about half): Drier substrate where they can choose drier conditions if needed. Place protein foods on this side — they spoil quickly in damp conditions.

Avoid waterlogging — moist, not wet. Standing water at the bottom of the enclosure causes problems. The substrate should hold together when squeezed but not drip water.

Temperature

21–28°C is the comfort range, with 23–27°C optimal for breeding. Most UK homes provide acceptable temperatures during warmer months; in winter, supplementary heating may be needed. A low-wattage heat mat on the side of the enclosure (never underneath, to avoid drying substrate) connected to a thermostat is the standard approach.

Consistency matters more than hitting any specific temperature. Avoid temperature swings that stress the colony.

Diet

Amber Duckies are not fussy eaters. Their broad diet makes them straightforward to feed:

  • Primary diet: Decaying hardwood leaf litter (oak, magnolia, beech, maple), rotting white wood, sphagnum moss — always available
  • Vegetables (offered 1–2x weekly): Sweet potato, carrot, courgette, butternut squash, pumpkin, cucumber. Replace within 24–48 hours to prevent mould.
  • Fruit (occasionally): Apple, banana, melon
  • Protein (essential — 1–2x weekly): Fish flakes, dried daphnia, silkworm pupae, or freeze-dried peas. All available across our protein supplement range. Place protein foods on the dry side of the enclosure.
  • Calcium (essential): Cuttlebone always available, plus limestone pieces mixed into substrate. Cubaris demand consistent calcium for healthy moulting — losing animals to moulting failure from calcium deficiency is the leading avoidable cause of colony loss.

Browse our accessories collection for the full range of substrate, calcium, leaf litter, and protein supplement products.

Breeding

Amber Duckies are among the more reliable Cubaris breeders, which makes them genuine breeding projects rather than just display animals. Females carry developing eggs in a brood pouch (marsupium), and juveniles emerge as live mancae after approximately 4–6 weeks. Young can be raised alongside adults without issue.

For successful breeding:

  • Stable warm temperatures (23–27°C is ideal)
  • Consistent humidity (65–80%)
  • Abundant calcium availability
  • Regular protein supplementation
  • Deep substrate (5–7 cm minimum) for security and moulting
  • Slightly increased ventilation during breeding periods can be beneficial
  • Minimal disturbance, especially during establishment
  • Starting with groups of at least 5–10 for genetic diversity

Patience is essential. Like most Cubaris, Amber Duckies breed slower than Porcellio or Armadillidium species. Don't expect explosive population growth — expect steady, reliable progress. Resist constantly checking the enclosure during the first few months; undisturbed colonies establish faster.

Pair With Springtails

Add a thriving springtail culture to any Amber Ducky setup. High-humidity, low-ventilation enclosures are particularly prone to mould, and springtails handle mould before it becomes a problem. They coexist peacefully with Amber Duckies and form an essential cleanup partnership. This isn't optional for Cubaris setups.

Who Should Buy Amber Ducky Isopods?

Ideal for:

  • Keepers stepping up from beginner species (Porcellio scaber, Dairy Cows, Armadillidium) into Cubaris
  • Anyone wanting attractive Cubaris at accessible pricing
  • Keepers building breeding colonies that actually grow
  • Tropical bioactive vivarium setups where humidity is maintained
  • People who appreciate warm-toned colouration over high-contrast patterns
  • Display setups where animal visibility matters

Not ideal for:

  • Complete beginners with zero isopod experience — start with hardier species first
  • Arid or low-humidity setups
  • Keepers who can't maintain consistent humidity year-round
  • Anyone wanting fast breeding rates (Cubaris are slow compared to Porcellio)
  • Reptile/amphibian feeders (the price doesn't justify feeder use)

Realistic Expectations

Newly arrived Amber Duckies, especially juveniles, often look less impressive than mature adults. Pattern intensity and the warm amber glow develop with age and good nutrition. Given 2–3 months of stable conditions, juveniles develop the bold, gradient adult colouration. Pattern variation is normal across a colony — some individuals will lean more toward gold, others toward orange, and the dark pereon contrast varies between animals.

Consistent warmth, calcium, and humidity are the three things that matter most. Get these right and Amber Duckies will reward you with one of the most visually warming colonies in your collection.

Building Your Setup

A complete Amber Ducky setup needs proper substrate components, calcium sources, leaf litter, and protein supplements. Browse our accessories collection for everything you need — enclosures, ventilation, leaf litter (magnolia, bamboo, Asian leaf mix), substrate enhancements (flake soil, kinshi), calcium (cuttlebone, limestone), and protein supplements (daphnia, silkworm pupae, fish flakes, freeze-dried peas, Repashy gel premixes).

Browse the full Cubaris collection to compare related species and morphs, or explore all isopods for the complete catalogue. New keepers should also see our setting up guide for full enclosure walkthroughs.

Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
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  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
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SKU: 49624887824

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Sarah
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 1
My little buddy loves it! (Loves it no more)
I ordered this in advance of the arrival of my 11 wk old Corgi pup. Not knowing what kind of a chewer I was getting, I wanted something that squeaked but did not have too many extremities to rip and tear at. I also didn't want too much stuffing to end up all over my house and in my buddy's tummy. It is soft and well constructed. I like that the snake is compartmentalized so that if one segment is breached, the others are not. As it turned out, at this time, my pup is not a violent ripper (except for with paper and cardboard). After a week of testing, it is his favorite toy. It took him about two days to figure out how to squeak it and boy does he love it. It is the only toy he will haul around, which is hilarious because its bigger than he is. It is also the only toy that he will play fetch with. I'm also working on "leave it" with the with him. Nemo chews a lot, but hasn't shown much interest in ripping at his toys, so after a week (if it were washed) it could probably pass as new. I also try to switch him over to a bone or rubber toy when he starts getting really excited. I am weary since my last dog was a lab who would shred her toys in seconds. Nemo was ripping at the tag (something about paper) so I cut that off to prevent a seem getting opened up. I'm surprised that the tongue is still intact. The tongue and eyes are weak links and Nemo does like to chew on them. Overall, I'm very pleased with this toy. My husband was skeptical and thought it a bit ridiculous, but even he has decided it was a good buy. *Update* Our original snake lasted 7 months. Nemo loved it. He would carry it around with him and squeak it till my husband and I went insane. He had mastered the rapid fire squeak. It was also the only toy he would reliably fetch. After 7 months my pup had punctured two of the squeakers and the fur was getting threadbare in some place. But overall we were very happy with the product. Last week we had a guest GSP at our home and he demolished the toy within minutes. Shredded all of the squeakers and the casing. So we were forced to get Nemo a new one. Unfortunately they have since changed the design. There is now a piping that goes all the way around the snake (before it was blind stitched). Nemo has a thing about tags and edges, he works slowly and methodically to nibble them off. Once the piping was compromised, Nemo had easy access to the squeakers. This new version of the toy lasted only a few hours. I am extremely disappointed with the changes made. I have reduced my 5 star review to 1 star and will no longer recommend this product.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 6, 2013
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Verified Purchase
Lainie
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
These really are durable and tough!
OMG! I have 2 large dogs. A 90 lb.golden retriever and a 75 lb. black lab mix. They LOVE to chew and every squeaky toy I have bought for them is demolished in less than 2-3 days! Even the KONG brand. I have spend hundreds of dollars on various dog toys, chews, squeaky toys, etc.None of them stood a chance! LOL So, I saw these "stuffingless durable tough" snakes and decided to give it a try! Why not? My husband even told me NOT to buy them as they would just be torn apart in days. The snakes came and each dog got one. I ordered 2 of the same color in red. At first, they weren't quite sure what to do with them as they are pretty long. Approximately 2 feet. They slowly began to trust that this was indeed a "toy" and began chewing on them and our golden retriever was tossing the snake up in the air and biting down on it as it fell to the ground. I also like the fact that the squeakers are a low volume and not so high pitched squeak! Well, long story short, they have now had the snakes for 6 days and they are still intact and the dogs absolutely love them!!!! I am so happy I finally found a dog toy that my dogs don't destroy!!! I will definitely be buying more!! Lainie Sammamish, Washington
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Reviewed in the United States on March 23, 2018
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Verified Purchase
Jane in AZ
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
A winning toy!
Color: No Stuffing Blue Eel, Color: No Stuffing Blue Eel
This is the best dog toy ever! I have a Cockapoo that is 8 years old but thinks she is 2. She chews up everything so I've gone thru a lot of dog toys. This toy has lasted 6 months - truly record breaking for her. It's become all raggy so time to get a new one. Thank you Nocciola for inventing a quality fun toy that lasts. Photo shows toy after 6 mo. of playing tug of war!
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Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2026
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JJ
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Winner of the aggressive chew competition
Color: No Stuffing Blue Eel
I bought several toys for an insane Jack Russell and this is the unlikely winner. It is a softer toy, but it is stitched together nicely and there are various components that distract the dog and keep him busy. First, it can be rolled up and stuck with small but strong Velcro patches, so it’s not just a sitting duck, the dog has to figure out how to unroll it which is fun. Next there are five little pockets on one side that you can put treats inside, which draw attention to the toy and give him another task. He did partially rip some of the flaps on the pockets in his zeal to get the treats. Then there is the squeaker, which he dispatched of in like 4 seconds (somehow without ripping the fabric(?)), then there are all sorts of crinkles and textures on both sides. All of this and the good stitching make it a toy he wants to play with but that he doesn’t annihilate in one day. The hard plastic toys are also good but I feel like I need to watch him carefully for fear that a sharp chunk will come off. The medium chew toys are cool but he’s just not into them. So this wins!
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Reviewed in the United States on July 12, 2025
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Verified Purchase
Collette
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
My dogs favorite toy!
Color: Blue & Yellow Eel Bundle
This is my Jack Chi and Yorkies favorite toys (it helps when they get 5 mini milk bones). It is a tough toy, but not impervious to a Jack Chi determination to remove all squeekiees! Squeekie or not, it's still their favorite toy for tug-a-war.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2026

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