
Release The Brood! Roly Poly Birthing Is Intense
Season 12 Episode 23 | 3m 52sVideo has Closed Captions
They curl into a ball, carry their babies in a pouch, and aren’t even insects. Meet the roly poly.
Roly polies aren’t insects — they’re crustaceans, and they have more in common with kangaroos than you might think. These land-dwelling isopods carry their eggs in a fluid-filled pouch on their underside, giving their young a tiny ocean to develop in until they’re ready to face the world.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback

Release The Brood! Roly Poly Birthing Is Intense
Season 12 Episode 23 | 3m 52sVideo has Closed Captions
Roly polies aren’t insects — they’re crustaceans, and they have more in common with kangaroos than you might think. These land-dwelling isopods carry their eggs in a fluid-filled pouch on their underside, giving their young a tiny ocean to develop in until they’re ready to face the world.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch Deep Look
Deep Look is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, LG TV, and Vizio.
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipWhat does this roly poly have in common with a kangaroo?
Here's a hint.
It's all about her parenting style.
Unlike mammals, most insects take a hands-off approach.
They find a good spot, lay their eggs, and move on.
Good luck, little one.
But roly polies, also called pill bugs or doodle bugs, aren't like most insects.
Actually, they aren't insects at all.
They're crustaceans, like shrimp and lobsters.
Roly-polies belong to a group of crustaceans called isopods, which originated in the sea.
About half of isopod species still live there, but roly poly ancestors ventured out onto dry land, And they brought with them a maternal adaptation from their aquatic past.
After mating, a female roly poly transfers her eggs into a fluid-filled pouch on her underside, called a marsupium.
At first, the marsupium just looks yellow, but it doesn't take long - just a few days till you can spot the eggs- about 40 to 60 of them.
Keeping them close is a good strategy.
If she were to lay her eggs on land, they'd dry out.
They don't have the protective outer barrier of an insect egg to keep moisture in.
But inside their moms' marsupium, the eggs have their own tiny ocean.
Roly polies are clad in overlapping armored plates called pereonites.
If she gets spooked, she can curl up in a perfect little ball to shield herself and her babies.
The marsupium is protected by more plates called oostegites- But they're thinner, almost clear, like a window into her nursery.
After three to four weeks, the babies, now called mancae, emerge from the eggs.
They look like miniature yellow versions of their mom.
But they aren't ready to face the world yet.
They keep developing inside their mama's pouch for another week or so.
As they mature, they start getting restless.
Sixty squirming babies in one crowded pouch- a feeling only a mother could love.
The mancae eventually wriggle out from between the plates covering their mom's pouch.
Then, after about a month of being little pouch potatoes, they're on their own.
They'll go on to do the good work of detritivores eating rotting wood and leaves, recycling the nutrients back into the soil.
And one day, the females will get to host their own pouch parties.
Marsupials and isopods tell a story of convergent evolution- Two wildly different animals, who've come up with a similar solution.
But unlike a kangaroo, a roly-poly mom doesn't invite her babies back in for a ride.
She gave them a nice, cozy upbringing- Now it's time for them to venture out and let the good times roll.
If you liked this video, please consider supporting KQED, the PBS station that produces Deep Look.
Donations from viewers like you allow us to continue making our award-winning series.
Click the link on screen or in the description below.
Now check out the six-rayed sea star- another very overprotective mom.


- Science and Nature

A documentary series capturing the resilient work of female land stewards across the United States.












Support for PBS provided by:

