SKU: 99487731735

Emerald Cockroach (Pseudoglomeris magnifica) for Sale

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Description

Emerald Cockroach (Pseudoglomeris magnifica) for SaleThe Emerald Cockroach is one of the most genuinely spectacular invertebrates available in the UK hobby a metallic emerald green species from Vietnam and southern China that shimmers like polished jade in any decent light. The iridescent body finish is unlike anything else on offer in the cockroach world: a clean, jewel toned metallic green that holds its colour through every life stage. Combined with the species's calm, diurnal temperament and

The Emerald Cockroach is one of the most genuinely spectacular invertebrates available in the UK hobby — a metallic emerald-green species from Vietnam and southern China that shimmers like polished jade in any decent light. The iridescent body finish is unlike anything else on offer in the cockroach world: a clean, jewel-toned metallic green that holds its colour through every life stage. Combined with the species's calm, diurnal temperament and arboreal lifestyle, this is properly a display animal rather than a feeder or cleanup-crew roach — the kind of species you keep specifically to be seen rather than to do a job.

This is part of our wider cockroach collection and sits alongside our other premium display roaches — the Giant Flower Cockroach (Eucorydia dasytoides) for those drawn to iridescent metallic blue-green species, and the Cuban Banana Cockroach for keepers wanting an active green species at an entry-level price point. For collectors building a focused display-roach collection, the Emerald is the centrepiece species — visually striking, behaviourally interesting, and properly rare in UK culture.

One honest framing point up front. Pseudoglomeris magnifica is a slow-breeding, intermediate-difficulty species. It's not difficult in the sense of being delicate, but the husbandry needs to be right and the breeding pace is genuinely slow — females gestate young for up to six months. This is a long-term project species rather than a quick colony to establish. To set things up properly from the start, browse our accessories collection for the leaf litter, sphagnum moss, cork bark, and supplementary foods that make the difference between a colony that ticks over and one that thrives.

Quick Care Summary

  • Scientific Name: Pseudoglomeris magnifica (Shelford, 1907); now also classified taxonomically as Corydidarum magnifica
  • Common Names: Emerald Cockroach, Asian Emerald Cockroach, Emerald Roach
  • Family: Blaberidae (subfamily Perisphaerinae)
  • Origin: Vietnam and southern China — typically found under leaf litter or on tree bark in tropical to subtropical forest
  • Adult Size: Up to 30 mm; females larger and thicker than males
  • Lifespan: Approximately 2 years for females; males meaningfully shorter
  • Difficulty: Medium — intermediate care, slow-breeding, needs proper specialist setup
  • Temperature: 22–28 °C
  • Humidity: 70–80% with daily misting to provide water droplets for drinking
  • Ventilation: Moderate
  • Activity: Diurnal (day-active) — unusual for cockroaches; surface-active and observable
  • Appearance: Iridescent metallic emerald-green body; jewel-like quality across all life stages; sexual dimorphism with winged males and wingless neotenous females
  • Sexual dimorphism: Adult males have wings and can glide short distances when startled; adult females remain wingless and retain a juvenile-like body form (neoteny)
  • Behaviour: Calm, non-aggressive, arboreal climbers; can climb smooth vertical surfaces — escape-proof lid essential
  • Breeding: Slow — females gestate young for up to six months; viviparous (give birth to live young)
  • Rarity: Very Rare in UK culture

What Makes the Emerald Cockroach Special

The iridescent emerald colouration. This is the single most striking feature of the species and the main reason it commands premium prices. The body has a genuine metallic finish — properly jewel-like, not just a brighter shade of green. Under good lighting the entire animal looks polished, with the metallic surface catching light at different angles. Importantly the colour holds across all life stages: nymphs already show the emerald base, and it intensifies through successive moults into adulthood rather than fading. For keepers used to dull brown cockroaches, the visual difference is genuinely transformative.

The diurnal activity. Most cockroaches are strictly nocturnal — they hide all day and emerge only after dark, making them properly difficult to observe. Pseudoglomeris magnifica breaks that mould: it's diurnal, active during the day, and surface-visible in a way that makes the species genuinely rewarding to watch. Combined with the iridescent body, this means you actually see them using the enclosure rather than just knowing they're in there somewhere.

The arboreal lifestyle. Unlike most pet cockroaches that scuttle along substrate, Emerald Cockroaches are climbers. In the wild they're found on tree bark and in elevated leaf litter, and in captivity they use the full vertical space of a tall enclosure — climbing cork bark, exploring branches, resting on the upper walls. This is a genuinely different husbandry profile from substrate-dwelling species and lets you build a properly three-dimensional display setup. A taller-than-wide enclosure with multiple vertical climbing structures is the right approach.

The neotenous females. Female P. magnifica have evolved an unusual trait — they retain a juvenile-like body form into adulthood (neoteny), with no wings developing at maturity. Adult males by contrast develop functional wings and can glide for short distances when startled. The result is a colony where the two sexes look distinctly different at maturity, with the chunkier wingless females and the slimmer winged males showing clear visual sexual dimorphism. This is unusual among cockroaches and adds genuine biological interest to the species.

The display-roach cluster. The Emerald sits at the top tier of the UK display-roach hobby alongside the Giant Flower Cockroach (Eucorydia dasytoides) — another iridescent metallic species but with a transformative juvenile-to-adult colour change. For collectors building a focused premium roach collection, both species belong together. The Cuban Banana Cockroach rounds out the green-roach options at an entry-level price.

About the Name

A brief clarification on the species's taxonomy, which has shifted recently.

  • Pseudoglomeris magnifica: The name used in the international hobby and the historical scientific binomial. Most keeper sources and breeder listings use this form.
  • Corydidarum magnifica: The currently accepted scientific binomial following taxonomic revision. Both names refer to the same species — they're synonyms, not different animals.
  • Trichoblatta magnifica, Pseudoglomeris dubia: Older synonyms occasionally seen in historical literature.
  • Emerald Cockroach / Asian Emerald Cockroach: The standard common names. Don't confuse with the unrelated "Emerald Cockroach Wasp" (Ampulex compressa), which is a parasitoid wasp that hunts other cockroaches.
  • Original description: Described by Shelford in 1907 from specimens collected in Southeast Asia.

Setting Up the Enclosure

Use a taller-than-wide enclosure to suit the arboreal lifestyle — vertical orientation matters more for this species than floor space. A 10–20 litre vertical container with a secure clip-lock lid works well for a starter group of 5–10 animals. P. magnifica can climb smooth vertical surfaces including glass and plastic, so the lid seal is genuinely critical. Many keepers add a foam seal strip around the top edge of the enclosure to prevent escapes — newly-hatched nymphs are only around 3 mm and can squeeze through tiny gaps.

Drill ventilation holes generously, covered with fine mesh. Moderate ventilation works well — enough airflow to prevent stagnation, without compromising the high humidity the species needs.

Vertical climbing structure is the central design feature. Provide multiple branches, cork bark in vertical orientations, and rotten wood pieces that span the height of the enclosure. Browse our accessories range for cork bark, branches and other natural climbing options. Position hides at multiple heights — some at substrate level for moulting and gravid females (who prefer humid conditions), others elevated for general resting. The differentiation matters: animals choose hides based on their current state.

Important husbandry note: Skip the standing water dish. P. magnifica drink primarily from water droplets on glass and leaves after misting, which is the species's natural drinking behaviour in the wild. Daily misting provides hydration without the drowning and mould risks of open water.

Substrate

Use a moisture-retentive forest-soil-style substrate:

  • Organic topsoil or forest humus (pesticide-free) as the foundation
  • Sphagnum moss for moisture retention in the lower layers — available in our accessories range
  • Composted hardwood leaf litter mixed through and layered on top — browse our accessories collection for ready-prepared options
  • Larger pieces of rotten hardwood incorporated into the substrate and standing as part of the climbing structure
  • Springtails inoculated into the substrate are highly recommended — they consume droppings and food waste, preventing mould in the warm humid setup

Substrate depth around 5–10 cm gives enough buffer for moisture retention and lets the substrate absorb daily misting without going waterlogged. Avoid coco coir as the primary substrate.

Humidity and Temperature

Maintain humidity around 70–80% with daily light misting. The misting serves two purposes: maintaining humidity, and providing drinking water as droplets on glass and leaves. This is genuinely important — P. magnifica drink almost exclusively from misted droplets in the wild and have evolved to depend on this water source. Don't skip the daily spraying.

Substrate height (5–10 cm) absorbs the daily moisture and prevents waterlogging. If you see standing water collecting on the substrate surface, the substrate is too shallow or the misting too heavy.

Temperature should be 22–28 °C, warmer than UK room temperature for most of the year. Most UK keepers maintain Emerald Cockroach colonies in a heated room or with mild supplementary warming via a low-wattage heat mat on a thermostat set to one side of the enclosure, creating a thermal gradient alongside the moisture gradient. Avoid placement near radiators or windows where temperatures fluctuate dramatically.

Diet

P. magnifica are primarily fruit-eaters in the wild, with a varied supplementary diet that distinguishes them from typical detritivorous cockroaches:

  • Fresh fruit — the dietary mainstay. Apple, banana, melon, mango, pear, soft pears in particular work well. Replace within 24–48 hours to prevent mould.
  • Hardwood leaf litter (oak, beech, hazel) — important secondary nutrition source, always available. Our accessories range includes properly prepared leaf litter.
  • Rotting hardwood pieces — eaten and used as climbing structure
  • Bee pollen — a particularly well-received supplementary food for this species; offer occasionally as part of a varied diet
  • Fish food (flake or pellet) — provides protein and additional micronutrients, offered 1–2x weekly. Browse the protein options in our accessories collection.
  • Vegetables occasionally — sweet potato, courgette, butternut squash — though less critical than fruit for this species
  • Calcium sources — cuttlebone, crushed limestone, oyster shell as background availability. Our calcium options cover the full range.

Position fresh food on dishes or leaves rather than directly on substrate to make removal of uneaten portions easier and reduce mould risk in the warm humid setup.

Breeding

Breeding P. magnifica is genuinely a long-term commitment. Females are viviparous — they give birth to live young rather than laying eggs — and gestation lasts up to six months. Combined with a moderate clutch size and the species's overall slow life cycle, colony expansion is properly slow. Even successfully established colonies expand modestly over years rather than weeks.

Sexual maturity comes earlier in males (around one month before females), which can complicate breeding planning since male lifespan after maturity is short. The practical solution is keeping mixed developmental stages in the same colony — newly-maturing males can fertilise females that are still developing, and older females (who live up to two years) can be fertilised multiple times across their lifespan.

For breeding success:

  • Stable temperature in the comfort range (24–27 °C is ideal)
  • Consistent daily misting maintained — don't let the routine slip
  • Multiple curved cork bark hides offered at different heights, including some at substrate level for gravid females and moulting animals (who prefer the more humid lower zone)
  • Mixed-age colony rather than single-cohort groups — supports the offset male-female maturation timeline
  • Springtails inoculated to manage waste and prevent mould
  • Minimal disturbance — like most arboreal cockroaches, P. magnifica settle better when left undisturbed
  • Patience — accept that colony expansion takes years, not months

Who Should Buy Emerald Cockroaches?

Ideal for:

  • Experienced invertebrate keepers ready to add a properly stunning display species to their collection
  • Display enthusiasts drawn to iridescent metallic species — combined with the Giant Flower Cockroach they make a focused jewel-roach cluster
  • Keepers who appreciate diurnal, observable species rather than secretive nocturnal animals
  • Anyone interested in arboreal husbandry and three-dimensional enclosure design
  • Long-term project keepers comfortable with slow breeding and gradual colony development
  • Collectors of rare and taxonomically interesting species

Not ideal for:

  • Complete beginners — start with hardier cockroach species like Madagascar Hissers or Cuban Banana first
  • Keepers wanting rapid colony expansion — six-month gestation makes breeding genuinely slow
  • Anyone wanting an enclosure they can leave unmaintained — daily misting is genuinely necessary
  • Setups in unheated UK rooms during colder months — supplementary warmth is realistically required
  • Keepers without an absolutely secure escape-proof enclosure — climbing ability is exceptional
  • Anyone needing feeder insects — this is a display species, far too valuable and slow-breeding for feeding purposes

Realistic Expectations

The colour is properly stunning. New keepers occasionally underestimate just how iridescent the body is — photos online vary in quality, but the metallic emerald finish in person is more impressive than most images suggest. Under decent lighting this is a genuinely show-stopping species. Under dim lighting the colour reads as more matte green; good ambient light brings out the full effect.

Breeding is slow enough to require patience. The six-month gestation period is well-documented and not a husbandry failure if you don't see young emerging quickly. Established breeding colonies expand over years rather than months. Plan accordingly — this isn't a species for keepers who want to see fast colony growth.

The escape risk is real. Newly-hatched nymphs (around 3 mm) can squeeze through small gaps that would contain adult animals comfortably. Foam-sealed lids, fine mesh on ventilation, and careful enclosure inspection before introducing animals are all standard precautions for this species. Treat escape-proofing as a setup requirement, not an afterthought.

Sex differences are visually obvious at maturity but subtle in nymphs. Distinguishing male and female nymphs requires examining the subgenital plate (the plate below the genitalia): a single large segment at the tip indicates female, two smaller segments indicate male. This matters if you're trying to balance sex ratios for breeding before animals mature; in mixed-sex starter groups, both sexes are normally present without active sexing.

They're not aggressive or smelly. New keepers sometimes carry assumptions from pest-cockroach associations — the household cockroach reputation that has nothing to do with this species. P. magnifica is calm, non-aggressive, doesn't carry odour issues in a properly maintained setup, and can't infest UK homes (they need the warm humid conditions of their native climate). The species is meaningfully closer to keeping an unusual beetle than a pest insect.

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SKU: 99487731735

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Chay
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
Great for Tough chewers!
Size: Large, Color: Dinos Frills (Red)
My dog is a tough chewer and absolutely loves this toy! He was able to get a little stuffing out of the leg so far and it’s been about a week. This might sound like a short amount of time but it usually takes him under 15 mins to unstuff a large toy even if they are advertised for “tough chewers!” This is a very large size toy and would be good for any larger breed. He carries it around the house and constantly keeps his Dino with him. Since Ive found GoDog toys I’ve only been purchasing them because of their durability. I’ve tried Kong and Bark toys previously and they just do hold up long and are usually more expensive. This toy is a great value and dogs love them!
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Reviewed in the United States on October 20, 2025
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Gerry
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
Super cool strong dog toy!
Size: Large, Color: Dinos Frills (Red)
Super cool strong dog toy!
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Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2026
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MalinoisLover
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 4
LOVE this brand. Have many of their styles. This is basically an unstuffed toy.
Size: Large, Color: Dinos Frills (Gray)
I have about 10 -12 different styles of the GoDog brand toys. It is like Xmas when my Malinois dogs get a new GoDog toy. Have loved this brand for many years and have some toys which have lasted 5-6 years -- minor "surgeries" stitch they back together -- until I retired them. They have never just worn out. Just to be clear: THESE TOYS ARE NOT CHEW PROOF. NO STUFFED TOY IS CHEW PROOF. However, this brand of stuffed toy is more chew proof than other brands. But if you are looking for a chew proof stuffed toy be advised -- IT DOES NOT EXIST!! No fabric is chew proof. Even if they invented such a fabric I would not want to ruin my dog's teeth by letting them try to chew through it. Protecting one's dog's teeth should be the highest priority. If a dog can chew through a PLASTIC KENNEL and even METAL WIRE KENNELS (yes, it happens) then they can easily chew through a puffy, fluffy stuffed toy. The "Chew Guard Technology" language may be misleading to some customers who are disappointed in the brand. I defend the brand and have used it for many years. No, I don't get paid or get free toys. Since I have had many styles within this brand and even have the pink version of this style I thought I knew what I was getting. This is basically a toy without stuffing which some people prefer. For whatever reasons my dogs prefer toys that are stuffed. Really stuffed with a firm density that they can sink their teeth into. So this toy will be OK. I can tell it will not be one of their beloved toys like some of the brand's other styles such as the purple brontosaurus. My fault for not reading more closely and assuming the grey version would be exactly like the pink version which is fully stuffed. If they get bored with these two I keep some of the Chew Guard toys stock piled. BTW one can wash and dry these toys. Yes, eventually the squeakers suck up some water and die but one can replace the squeakers. Also on Amazon. So I am willing to replace the squeakers a few times in the life time of one of these toys to be able to wash and dry them occasionally. Usually takes a couple drying cycles to get the heavily stuffed toys dried completely. If you have an aggressive chewer you may wish to look into Goughnuts dog toys or other hard rubber toys that are designed for aggressive chewers. Even then, with a determined dog, the Goughnuts toys can be chewed through. I think they offer a replacement guarantee. The other brand which has some toys of hard rubber is West Paw. An excellent brand that also offers a one time replacement. Bully Sticks are another option for chewers. PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE stay away from the hard plastic chew toys like the Nyla Bones. Hard plastic toys will destroy your dog's teeth over time. I learned the hard way (no pun intended) and ruined one of my dog's teeth. Vet asked if I allowed my dog to chew ROCKS !!!!!! Every tooth was cracked or fractured. Not wishing to pull teeth I had to pay for some very expensive root canals and caps. Vet's advise: If you can't dent the toy or chew with your finger nail DO NOT offer to your dog. Good advise to follow. Even some of the Bully Sticks (Costco Brand) are so hard they can chip or fracture teeth. Best for you and your dog.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2019
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P SD
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 5
Well made, minor issue was quickly resolved
Size: Large, Color: Dinos Bruto (Purple)
I purchased the Dino Bruto Dog toy for my labradoodle who is quite fond of squeaky, squawky stuffed toys and oddly enough has shown a preference for purple. I opened the package with my hound standing by waiting for his gift. I detached the tags and attempted to squeak the toy. It seemed difficult to squeak or honk. I tossed the purple Dino Bruto to my dog who excitedly chomped to squeak. The toy squawked a couple times and then just quit. My poor hound was staring up at me with that "what's up with this" look on his face. I tracked down the website for the GoDog toys, not going through the Amazon return process. I called the good people at GoDog and stated simply that my dog's favorite part of the toy failed quite quickly and I was wondering about guarantees. I was told to go to the website and file a replacement request. The replacement request required that I include a photo which I did as directed. I received an reply email within a couple hours which stated that a new toy would be sent out shortly. I am happy to report that we received a replacement toy, not the purple Dino, but a colorful wood duck. The squawker device works well and is still performing like new more than a month later. It appears that the squeaker is not those little plastic squeakers but the bigger heavy plastic bag, bladder, with what I visualize as a duck call sort of sound device. I am guessing because I haven't seen the inside of the GoDog toys. I have seen the guts of other stuffed toys which use this type of noise device. While our dog seems to enjoy the sound of the plastic bag, bladder set-up squawkers, they seem to fail quickly and I tend to avoid them because of this. The toys using this type of squawker that I have seen, use what looks like a cheap lightweight plastic bag which is not securely attached to the "voice box". Since the GoDog replacement toy is holding up so well, I am guessing GoDog uses a heavier grade plastic bladder coupled with reinforced construction. The purple Dino Bruto toy still looks new even after multiple times of our hound grabbing the purple toy, shaking it at us with his invite to give chase or play keep away. Since the squawker failed so quickly with the new toy, I figure it was just a defective item which does not reflect the general quality of toys from GoDog. One evening our neighbor was visiting while his pitbull was playing in our yard with our dog. Our patio door was open so our dog ran into the house and grabbed his purple Dino Bruto toy. He is a bit of a show-off with new toys. Our dog then went racing back into the yard, shaking his GoDog toy at the pitbull. A quick game of tug-of-war ensued. Since this is a new toy, our neighbor leaped into the game and took the toy away from the dogs. In that short time of tugging between the dogs, the toy held together and did not even pull apart at any of the seams. There were no puncture marks either. This is a game our dog has initiated before with the neighbor pitbull. Normally, the stuffed toys are ripped apart almost immediately. I was surprised and impressed with the quality of the sewing which appears to employ some sort of reinforced construction or heavier material. I plan to make more purchases from GoDog toys. The toys are a little more expensive than some stuffed dogs toys but they hold up so well I figure they are worth a few more dollars. They are great toys that hold up well and the company provides quick responses to inquiries. I consider this a winning combination.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2013
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Jan F.
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
Good quality
Size: Large, Color: Dinos Frills (Gray)
we’ve had many godog toys over the years and although my dog eventually rips through them I do find that they last longer than other cheap toys. Overall very well made!
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Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2026

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