Pagurus longicarpus
Pagurus longicarpus, the long-wristed hermit crab or the long-clawed hermit crab, is a common hermit crab found along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States and the Atlantic coast of Canada.
Description
This species of hermit crab can reach a shell length of up to half an inch in size. P. longicarpus coloration can vary, but body color is most commonly gray, green or white. The right claw of P. longicarpus is much larger than the left, and each claw has a tan or gray stripe down the middle.The long-wristed hermit crab inhabits the empty shells of gastropods such as periwinkles, snails, and oyster drills for mobile shelter and protection of their soft abdomens. They anchor themselves into the shells by wrapping their abdomens around the columella, or axis, inside the vacant shell. Hermit crabs cannot produce their own shells, and therefore must scavenge for abandoned ones. Shell selection plays many crucial roles in P. longicarpus, such as providing protection from predators, desiccation and salinity stress, as well as influencing competition, population size, and reproductive behaviors in the species.
Distribution and habitat
Pagurus longicarpus is commonly found along the Atlantic coast of Canada and the United States, from Nova Scotia to Northeastern Florida, as well as along the Gulf coast of the United States to Texas. These hermit crabs can be found in intertidal and subtidal Atlantic environments on a variety of substrates and at depths of up to 200 meters. Most commonly, P. longicarpus is found in shallow tidal pools during the months of April to October, and in deeper and warmer waters during the fall and winter months. P. longicarpus faces extreme temperature and salinity fluctuations while inhabiting tidal pools due to the rising and falling tides, as well as changing climate. On hot, sunny days, there is often a rapid increase in tidal pool temperature and salinity, whereas on cooler, rainier days, salinity and temperature can rapidly decrease. Rising tides can also alter tidal pool conditions to those of the surrounding ocean. Due to these harsh living conditions, P. longicarpus depends heavily on its shell to cope with changing conditions. These fluctuating conditions can also impact shell selection in the species and determine species distribution within intertidal and subtidal regions.According to Neumann, Knebelsberger, Barco and Haslob, P. longicarpus has become established in the North Frisian Wadden Sea. This may have occurred due to trans-Atlantic transport of larvae in ballast water.
Diet and predation
Long-wristed hermit crabs are scavenger feeders with a broad diet consisting of detritus, organic material found in ocean surface foam, microcrustaceans and algae. Feeding is performed by scooping sand or other substrate with the chelipeds, ripping and tearing food, and then passing it to the mouth for consumption.The major predators of P. longicarpus include birds, fish, snails, octopuses and other crabs, including the green crab. Hermit crab shells are crucial for protection and minimizing predation, and therefore proper shell selection is vital. P. longicarpus will avoid selecting shells with extensive damage because they are more vulnerable to predation. The most common type of damage to hermit crab shells is the presence of small holes. These holes are caused by the drilling of nacticid gastropods in order to prey on the original gastropod hosts of the shell.