Tag Archives: horseshoe crabs

The Amazing Horseshoe Crab

These amazing creatures predate the dinosaurs by millions of years. Although we refer to them as “crabs,” they are not crustaceans, and are more closely related to spiders than crabs. Because Horseshoe Crabs live in protected coastal waters, all photos were taken along Port Royal Sound on the north end of the island.

Horseshoe Crabs spend most of their lives moving along the ocean floor like a small tank, eating whatever lay in their way- fish, shellfish, worms, dead and decaying matter, and even algae. These animals have five pairs of walking legs and, a pair in the front, and one pair of pusher legs in the back used for swimming. (Did you know that they swim upside-down?). They have external book gills (so named because they sorta, kinda look like the pages of a book) that are used for breathing, but also assist with swimming.

This video is of the crabs swimming in the pooled water around the jetty at the heel of the island. You’ll notice smaller males clinging to the backs of the larger females. For more about the spawning of the Horseshoe Crabs, visit my post from May 7, 2016.

Spawning at the jetty…

Continue reading

Horseshoe Crab Tagging Program

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I found this live tagged female May 15, 2016 on Mitchelville Beach, just west of the sign marking the public shellfish grounds.

Horseshoe crab eggs provide an important food source for shorebirds, the crabs themselves are important to medical research and pharmaceutical companies, and they are harvested by commercial fishermen to be used as bait. The status of horseshoe crab populations along the Atlantic coast is poorly understood, but the crabs continue to be harvested. Although it is believed that horseshoe crabs are abundant, a decline in the population could severely impact shorebird populations that depend on the eggs for survival and severely impact medical uses of the crabs.

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Each animal is tagged with a unique number and the tag includes both the phone number and website for reporting.

In 1999, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service initiated a coast-wide tagging program. Currently horseshoe crabs are tagged and released by researchers along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts as part of several on-going studies. This program provides data on distribution, movement, longevity, and mortality of horseshoe crabs. Data are used to inform management decisions about maintaining sustainable horseshoe crab populations. Proper management of horseshoe crab populations will benefit shorebirds, the biomedical industry and the commercial fishing industry.

The U.S, Fish and Wildlife Service views public involvement as an important factor in this program. If you see a Horseshoe Crab with a tag such as this, please call the phone number on the tag and report the tag number, or easier yet, just go online and fill out the Horseshoe Crab Resighting Form. Taking a picture as I did or writing down the numbers will aid you. A certificate of participation containing release information is sent to those who report horseshoe crab tags. You will also receive information about horseshoe crabs and shorebirds, and the first time you make a report you get an awesome pewter horseshoe crab pin.

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My certificate and pewter pin came about two months after I reported the tag. I think maybe the release and recapture dates got swapped, but they still tell me that this particular lady was tagged almost a year ago to the day on the same stretch of beach.

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The information sent with my certificate and pin. I had to laugh that the original address was Hilton Head Island, OHIO.

In Danger of Becoming Endangered…

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I was so saddened to read the article published in “Scientific American” last week. I nearly shared this on the Facebook page for this website, but felt that it warranted a more complete and permanent sharing, so I have included the complete text here. People ask during my programs about threats to the animal being discussed (horseshoe crabs, dolphins, sea turtles, etc), and the biggest threat to all of these is MAN, and so it continues. These creatures predate the dinosaurs and have been of invaluable medical assistance since the 1950’s and look what we are doing to them. I could just cry.

Medical Labs May Be Killing Horseshoe Crabs

Drawing the crabs’ blue blood for vital medical testing can condemn the animals to die, even after they are returned to the sea.

In 2013 John Tanacredi, an environmental sciences professor at Molloy College on Long Island, N.Y., received a call from a friend who worked at nearby John F. Kennedy International Airport. “You’ve got to see this,” he told Tanacredi, and sent him a photo of a cargo container filled with 600 dead horseshoe crabs. It was mid-July, and airport officials had opened the container because of a rotting stench. Continue reading

Sex (?!) on the beach…

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Last night was the new moon and the new moon means spring tides.  Tides are tied (groan) to the lunar cycle, with the highest (and lowest) tides happening every 14 days, at the new and full moons. These large tide swings is referred to as a spring tides. But why is this important you ask? Because Horseshoe Crabs are exceptionally numerous on our beaches during their spring spawning season that runs from March through June, and it is during the spring tides that the mama crabs venture onto the beaches en masse to deposit their eggs in the sand. Continue reading

Pleased with my progress…

Notice the 3 main body parts: the prosoma (the front horseshoe shape), the opisthosoma (middle), and the telson (tail). People mistake the telson for a weapon, but it is actually used as a rudder for steering, and to help right itself if it gets flipped over. NEVER, never, never pick up a live horeseshoe crab by its telson.

Notice the 3 main body parts: the prosoma (the front horseshoe shape), the opisthosoma (middle), and the telson (tail). People mistake the telson for a weapon, but it is actually used as a rudder for steering, and to help right itself if it gets flipped over. NEVER, never, never pick up a live horeseshoe crab by its telson.

I am featuring my pages related to places on the website until spring break, but I was working on my horseshoe crab page today and was so pleased with how it is shaping up that I wanted to share it. Have a look and tell me what you think? Is there anything you would like to see added? Or is it too much?