Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Hermit Crab

Description:

Hermit crabs are decapod crustaceans of the superfamily Paguroidea. Most of the 1100 species possess an asymmetrical abdomen which is concealed in an empty gastropod shell carried around by the hermit crab. Most species have long, spirally curved abdomens, which are soft, unlike the hard, calcified abdomens seen in related crustaceans. The vulnerable abdomen is protected from predators by a salvaged empty seashell carried by the hermit crab, into which its whole body can retract. Most frequently, hermit crabs use the shells of sea snails (although the shells of bivalves and scaphopods and even hollow pieces of wood and stone are used by some species). The tip of the hermit crab's abdomen is adapted to clasp strongly onto the columella of the snail shell. As the hermit crab grows in size, it must find a larger shell and abandon the previous one. This habit of living in a second-hand shell gives rise to the popular name "hermit crab", by analogy to a hermit who lives alone. Several hermit crab species, both terrestrial and marine, use vacancy chains to find new shells; when a new, bigger shell becomes available, hermit crabs gather around it and form a kind of queue from largest to smallest. When the largest crab moves into the new shell, the second-biggest crab moves into the newly vacated shell, thereby making its previous shell available to the third crab, and so on. Hermit crabs often "gang up" on a hermit crab with what they perceive to be a better shell, where they will actually pry its home (shell) away from it and then compete for it, and one will ultimately take it over. Most species are aquatic and live in varying depths of salt water, from shallow reefs and shorelines to deep sea bottoms. Tropical areas host some terrestrial species, though even those have aquatic larvae and therefore need access to water for reproduction. Most hermit crabs are nocturnal. A few species do not use a "mobile home" and inhabit immobile structures left by polychaete worms, vermetid gastropods, corals, and sponges.

1 Species ID Suggestions

White-spotted Hermit Crab
Dardanus megistos Dardanus megistos


Sign in to suggest organism ID

4 Comments

Scott Frazier
Scott Frazier 9 years ago

Moved from "other" to the category Arthropods. :-)

AlbertKang
AlbertKang 9 years ago

Thanks, @StirredMocha for the ID and kind comments :)

@Gilma, Hermit Crabs can be fun to watch. You don't need to be a scuba diver to see them although you do see more variety of them when underwater.
You can see them at the beach and if you spend enough time to observes them, you might be able to see some interesting interactions among them :D

AlbertKang, thank you for sharing such beautiful picture and description.
It is very interesting, specially the part of "Ganging up to take a better shell from another crab and competing for it!!"

StirredMocha
StirredMocha 9 years ago

Beautiful photography!

AlbertKang
Spotted by
AlbertKang

Batangas, Philippines

Spotted on Aug 14, 2014
Submitted on Aug 20, 2014

Related Spottings

Spotting Hermit Crab Hermit crab Hermit crabs

Nearby Spottings

Chinese Trumpetfish Chinese Trumpetfish - Golden variation Longhorn Cowfish Tripletail Wrasse
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team