MILLIPEDES
The calm, many-legged legends of the bioactive world. Peaceful display animals that help tell a bigger story: soil isn’t dirt, it’s a living system. Let’s build that system together.
Species lineup, display tips, habitat vibes, and simple care that makes millipedes feel “easy but fascinating.”
Millipedes turn old leaves into future soil. It’s nature’s recycling engine, marching politely across the forest floor.
They’re gentle, but they’re still delicate. Humidity, substrate depth, and airflow are your three power switches.
Millipede Species Lineup
A rotating lineup, depending on season and availability. These are our core favorites and crowd-stoppers.
Scarlet Millipede
A classic “wow” species with bold contrast and easy display vibes when kept humid and well-fed with leaf litter.
Florida Ivory Millipede
Smooth, elegant, and local-flavored. A calm showcase animal that shines in deep substrate with plenty of decaying hardwood.
Giant Pink Foot Millipede
Big, gentle, and display-friendly. A “hand-sized” ambassador species that turns leaf litter into soil like a pro.
Desert Giant Millipede
A drier-habitat specialist. Still needs moisture pockets, but thrives with smart gradients and ventilation balance.
Bumblebee Millipede
Striped, charismatic, and perfect for “what is that?!” moments. Great in a bioactive display with leaf layers.
Seasonal Visitors
Sometimes we feature special morphs, sizes, or uncommon species. Check in regularly to see what marched in.
THE LIVING SOIL LINE
Millipedes are detritivores. That means they eat the “old forest” layers: decaying leaves, rotting wood, and the soft, crumbly stuff that becomes tomorrow’s soil. They’re not just display animals. They’re tiny compost engines with excellent manners.
- They’re calm and slow-moving, ideal for relaxed displays
- They make bioactive enclosures feel alive
- They’re fascinating up close: segments, legs, and gentle motion
- Great “first invert” for many Patrons
Millipede Care Basics
Simple, stable, and stress-free. If you get the substrate right, the rest becomes easy.
SUBSTRATE DEPTH
Think “forest floor,” not “pet bedding.” Deep, organic substrate lets them burrow, molt, and feel secure.
- Mix: leaf litter + decayed hardwood + soil-like base
- Add a top layer of crunchy leaves for constant grazing
- Always avoid pine/cedar and anything resin-heavy
HUMIDITY + AIRFLOW
They like humidity, but they hate stagnant “swamp air.” Create moisture zones, not a sealed sauna.
- Mist lightly as needed, keep one side slightly drier
- Ventilation matters, especially for mold control
- Let the surface dry a bit while the lower layers stay damp
FOOD
Most of their diet is the habitat itself. Supplement like a chef, not a fast-food drive-thru.
- Primary: leaf litter + decayed wood
- Optional: veggies, fruit, mushroom scraps (small portions)
- Calcium source helps, especially for long-term stability
HANDLING
Millipedes are gentle, but they’re delicate. Hands-off display is usually best.
- Support their whole body, never dangle
- Keep handling short, low, and calm
- Wash hands after, for both you and them
Millipede FAQ
Fast answers for curious Patrons. If you want help choosing the right species for your setup, message us and we’ll guide you.
Are millipedes safe and peaceful? +
Why did my millipede burrow and vanish? +
What do they actually eat? +
Can millipedes live in a bioactive enclosure? +
Millipede Exhibit Archive
This gallery is being curated with real MYCO-EMPORIUM specimens. We focus on natural posture, segment detail, and habitat context rather than staged or artificial imagery.
Looking for a Species Match?
Whether you’re building a bioactive enclosure, classroom display, or calm living ecosystem, we’ll help you choose a species that fits your environment and experience level.
Millipedes are the quiet engineers of the forest floor. When you keep them well, your enclosure stops being a box and starts being a small, living world.
