SKU: 89963336377

Yellow springtails (albino) Ceratophysella Sp

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Description

Yellow springtails (albino) Ceratophysella SpYellow Springtails are a striking bright yellow to cream colour form of Ceratophysella springtails a genuinely useful twist on one of the most essential pieces of microfauna in the bioactive hobby. Where standard springtails display darker grey or white colouration, this albino (amelanistic) variant shows a warm yellow cream colour that makes them notably more visible in an enclosure, adding a subtle pop of colour to bioactive setups while performing

Yellow Springtails are a striking bright yellow-to-cream colour form of Ceratophysella springtails — a genuinely useful twist on one of the most essential pieces of microfauna in the bioactive hobby. Where standard springtails display darker grey or white colouration, this albino (amelanistic) variant shows a warm yellow-cream colour that makes them notably more visible in an enclosure, adding a subtle pop of colour to bioactive setups while performing exactly the same vital cleanup functions. They're easy to culture, prolific breeders, and a practical choice for keepers who want functional springtails with a bit of added visual interest.

Springtails are one of the cornerstones of any successful bioactive setup, and Yellow Springtails do everything standard springtails do — consuming mould, fungal growth, and decaying organic matter — just in a more eye-catching form. Their tiny size lets them access spaces isopods can't reach, making them the perfect complement to an isopod cleanup crew rather than a replacement for one. For keepers who like to actually see their cleanup crew at work, the yellow colouration is a genuine bonus.

This is a captive-bred colour form of a widely-distributed genus. Despite the "albino" name, they're not fragile — they're as hardy and prolific as any standard springtail, reproducing rapidly under good conditions and quickly establishing self-sustaining colonies. They're an excellent choice for seeding multiple enclosures or maintaining a dedicated culture to replenish bioactive setups over time.

Quick Care Summary

  • Scientific Name: Ceratophysella sp. 'Yellow' / 'Albino'
  • Common Names: Yellow Springtails, Albino Springtails, Yellow Collembola
  • Class: Collembola (springtails are hexapods, not insects)
  • Origin: Captive-bred colour form of a widely-distributed genus
  • Average Size: 1–2 mm — very small
  • Lifespan: Several months individually; colonies are self-sustaining
  • Difficulty: Very Easy — among the easiest invertebrates to keep
  • Temperature: 18–26°C (room temperature works year-round)
  • Humidity: High (70–90%) — moist conditions essential
  • Ventilation: Low — retain humidity
  • Behaviour: Constantly active, jumps when disturbed (via furcula), harmless
  • Breeding: Rapid and prolific — self-sustaining colonies with minimal intervention

What Makes Yellow Springtails Special

Several factors make the Yellow colour form a worthwhile choice over standard springtails:

The bright yellow-cream colour is genuinely distinctive. This albino (amelanistic) form lacks the typical darker pigmentation, resulting in a warm yellow-to-cream appearance. The practical benefit is visibility — Yellow Springtails are far easier to spot against dark substrate than white or grey springtails, so you can actually see your cleanup crew working rather than wondering whether they're still there.

Identical function to standard springtails. The colour is the only difference — Yellow Springtails perform exactly the same essential bioactive roles. They consume mould before it becomes problematic, process decaying plant matter, and help maintain healthy substrate conditions. You get the added visual interest with zero compromise on function.

Genuinely easy and prolific. Springtails are among the easiest invertebrates to maintain, and the Yellow form is no exception. Keep them moist, offer occasional food, and they largely take care of themselves — reproducing rapidly and building self-sustaining colonies. Ideal for beginners and low-maintenance keepers alike.

Access spaces isopods can't. At just 1–2 mm, springtails reach into tiny crevices, between substrate particles, and across surfaces that larger isopods can't access. This is precisely why they complement isopods so well — the two occupy different niches and together provide far more comprehensive cleanup than either alone.

The furcula jump. Springtails are named for the forked appendage (furcula) tucked under the abdomen that lets them spring into the air when disturbed. It's a harmless defensive behaviour — they can't control where they land — and can be a surprising and rather charming thing to see when you open an enclosure.

Excellent value cleanup crew. Inexpensive, prolific, and genuinely functional, Yellow Springtails deliver real bioactive benefits with the bonus of visual interest, all at no extra care cost compared to standard springtails.

The Essential Bioactive Partnership

Springtails and isopods are the two foundational components of most bioactive cleanup crews, and they work best together:

  • Springtails handle mould, fungal growth, and microbial cleanup, accessing tiny spaces and processing matter at a fine scale.
  • Isopods process larger organic matter — decaying wood, leaf litter, and bigger debris — that springtails can't tackle alone.

Using both provides comprehensive cleanup that keeps a setup healthy and balanced. Yellow Springtails pair peacefully with any of our isopod species — from tropical Cubaris to hardy Dairy Cow isopods — and form an essential cleanup partnership in any bioactive enclosure. Browse the full springtails collection to compare colour forms and species.

Culturing and Habitat Setup

Culturing container: A small plastic container with a secure lid works well. Ventilation should be minimal — small holes or occasional opening for air exchange. The priority is maintaining humidity. The 3L Braplast tub works well as a dedicated culture container.

Substrate options: Several substrates work for springtail cultures — horticultural charcoal (a popular choice that holds moisture and which springtails thrive on), organic topsoil mixed with leaf litter, or sphagnum peat moss. For bioactive setups, springtails will colonise whatever substrate is present provided moisture levels are adequate.

Moisture — critical: The substrate should remain consistently moist but never flooded. Waterlogging drowns springtails, while drying out kills them. A good test: the substrate should feel damp to the touch but not squeeze out water. Mist regularly with dechlorinated water to maintain dampness.

Humidity: High humidity (70–90%) is ideal. The enclosed nature of culture containers naturally maintains humidity when the substrate is kept moist.

Temperature: Room temperature (18–26°C) works well. They tolerate a reasonable range but avoid extremes; no supplementary heating is typically required.

Ventilation: Minimal. Cultures need some air exchange to prevent anaerobic conditions, but excessive ventilation dries out the enclosure. Small ventilation holes or periodic lid opening is sufficient. Browse our accessories collection for culture containers and supplies.

Diet

Springtails are detritivores and fungivores with simple dietary needs:

  • Primary foods: Mould and fungal growth (their main bioactive role), decaying organic matter, decomposing leaf litter, dead plant material
  • Supplementary foods for culturing: Brewer's or nutritional yeast (sprinkled on the substrate), crushed fish flakes, small amounts of cooked rice, mushroom pieces, or commercial springtail diets

Feeding approach: When culturing, feed small amounts regularly — sprinkle food lightly across the substrate surface, as a little goes a long way with these tiny creatures. Overfeeding leads to mould problems and can attract pests. In established bioactive setups, springtails often sustain themselves on naturally occurring organic matter and fungal growth without supplementary feeding.

Breeding

Springtails reproduce rapidly and are easy to culture, making them ideal for keepers maintaining multiple enclosures.

Breeding basics:

  • Reproduce through eggs laid in moist substrate
  • Eggs hatch into miniature versions of adults (no larval stage)
  • Populations can boom rapidly under good conditions
  • Self-sustaining colonies with minimal intervention

Conditions for breeding: High humidity (70–90%), moist substrate, adequate food, stable temperatures (18–26°C), and avoiding waterlogging. Populations are largely self-regulating — they boom when conditions and food are abundant, then stabilise as resources balance out. In bioactive setups, populations typically find a natural equilibrium based on available food.

Culturing for harvest: Many keepers maintain dedicated cultures to seed new enclosures or replenish populations. A simple container with appropriate substrate, kept moist with regular feeding, will produce harvestable quantities within weeks.

Bioactive Integration

Yellow Springtails are excellent additions to bioactive setups across a wide range of enclosure types:

  • Tropical and humid bioactive enclosures
  • Dart frog vivariums (where they also serve as a food source)
  • Crested gecko and similar humid gecko setups
  • Humid reptile and amphibian enclosures
  • Planted terrariums
  • Isopod enclosures (springtails and isopods complement each other)

Their high-humidity requirement (70–90%) makes them particularly well-suited to tropical setups. In dart frog and small amphibian vivariums they pull double duty — cleanup crew and occasional live food. The yellow colouration means you'll actually see them at work, which many keepers genuinely enjoy.

Who Should Buy Yellow Springtails?

Ideal for:

  • Bioactive setups of all types (within humidity requirements)
  • Keepers who want visible springtails they can actually see working
  • Dart frog and small amphibian enclosures (cleanup crew plus food source)
  • Pairing with isopods for comprehensive cleanup
  • Anyone needing easy-to-culture springtails to seed multiple enclosures
  • Beginners wanting genuinely low-maintenance microfauna

Not ideal for:

  • Arid or low-humidity setups (they need consistent moisture)
  • Keepers who dislike jumping invertebrates
  • Situations where any visible microfauna is unwanted (choose a less visible white form instead)

Realistic Expectations

Yellow Springtails are very easy to keep — among the easiest invertebrates in the hobby. Keep them moist, provide occasional food, and they largely take care of themselves. They're genuinely beginner-friendly and low-maintenance.

They need consistent moisture. This is the one non-negotiable: the substrate must stay damp but not flooded. Drying out and waterlogging are the two ways to lose a culture — keep things damp-to-the-touch and you'll have no problems. As one PostPods customer noted about following the website's care guidance, proper instructions prevent the common mistake of getting moisture wrong.

They jump. When disturbed, springtails use their furcula to spring randomly into the air. It's harmless but can be surprising when you first open the enclosure — entirely normal behaviour.

Colour intensity varies slightly. The yellow-cream colouration can vary a little depending on diet and age, but the population as a whole remains distinctly more visible than white or grey springtails.

Populations self-regulate. Don't be alarmed by booms and dips — springtail numbers naturally fluctuate based on available food and conditions, finding their own equilibrium in an established setup.

Building Your Bioactive Setup

Yellow Springtails are one piece of a complete bioactive cleanup crew. Pair them with isopods and the right substrate and cover for a fully functional setup. Browse our accessories collection for culture containers, substrate, leaf litter, and supplies, and our isopods collection for the perfect cleanup-crew partners.

New to bioactive keeping? Read our blog post on setting up and selecting your first isopods for guidance on building a thriving enclosure — springtails like these are an essential foundation.

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