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Outdoors & Recreation
Help biologists monitor spawning crabs
Conditions around the full moon March 27 will create ideal opportunities to view the spawning behavior
Article published on Thursday, March 21, 2013
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Photo courtesy of FWC
Mating horseshoe crabs “pair up,” with the smaller male on top of the larger female.
A ritual dating back millions of years takes place again this spring on Florida beaches.

Spring marks horseshoe crabs’ mating season, and biologists with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission want the public’s help identifying spawning sites.

Beachgoers will likely have the best luck spotting mating horseshoe crabs around high tide, just before, during or after a new or full moon. The conditions around the full moon on March 27 will create ideal opportunities to view the spawning behavior of horseshoe crabs.

Mating crabs “pair up,” with the smaller male on top of the larger female. Other male crabs may also be present around the couple. Beachgoers lucky enough to spot horseshoe crabs are asked to note how many they see and whether the horseshoe crabs are mating. If possible, the observer should also count how many horseshoe crabs are mating adults and how many are juveniles (4 inches wide or smaller).

In addition, biologists ask observers to provide the date, time, location, habitat type and environmental conditions – such as tides and moon phase – when a sighting occurs.

The FWC asks the public to report sightings through one of several options. Go to MyFWC.com/Contact and click on the “Submit a Horseshoe Crab Survey” link, then “Florida Horseshoe Crab Spawning Beach Survey.” You can also report findings via email at horseshoe@MyFWC.com or by phone at 866-252-9326.

Through December 2012, the FWC has received 2,607 reports from across Florida since the survey program began in April 2002.

Horseshoe crabs, often called “living fossils,” are an important part of the marine ecosystem. Their eggs are a food source for animals. Birds, such as red knots, rely on horseshoe crab eggs to fuel their long migrations to nesting grounds.

Horseshoe crabs have also proved valuable to human medicine. Pharmaceutical companies use horseshoe crab blood to ensure intravenous drugs and vaccine injections are bacteria-free and sterile. Scientists are also using horseshoe crabs in cancer research.
Article published on Thursday, March 21, 2013
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