Little Monsters - Part 29: Hermit Crabs!

in #photography8 years ago


About two years ago, my wife came home with a surprise!
The pet section of a hardware store had had a display with some hermit crabs and she bought one group of three. The crabs, which are terrestrial hermit crabs, too much water, too deep and they'll drown!, were really quite cute.

These first two pictures are of the smallest of the three "Chibi" or "Little" in Japanese. It is perched on the narrow end of a wooden chopstick!
These crabs are fantastic climbers, I even caught this one working its way up the silicon seam joining the glass plates of the aquarium together, so you need a secure lid!

"Kuro" "Black" in Japanese, was about 50% bigger than the little one.

After some quick research on how to keep them, their habitat was quickly upgraded from a plastic bucket, to a small cube style aquarium to a large standard aquarium.
Filled with about 12cm of wet sand, and a plethora of shells of different sizes and some things to climb on.

The math is a bit amusing:
500yen 3 crabs
1000yen bunch of shells
5000yen sand (a lot of sand!)
5000yen+ aquarium, though that was from storage from when we kept some goldfish (surprisingly long lived fish actually).


The big one "Posiedon" at least 3 times bigger than the other two.

Posiedon likes to change shells fairly often.
And is currently wearing this pinkish coloured shell:

Chibi changed into this small shell at the first oportunity.

Eventually, it would wear the shell that "Kuro" had. "Kuro" I think was dug up by accident by another crab as it was molting and unfortunately dehydrated and perished from the stress.

About a year later, Chibi disappeared. A curious fact about these hermit crabs is that they must be in complete darkness to produce an enzyme that allows them to shed their exoskeleton so they can molt. To do this they dig a burrow into the sand. This is why you need about 15cm of sand in the tank. This has the advantage of ensuring the crab digs down deep enough to be undisturbed while this lengthy process occurs. Once complete they will then dig themselves out and continue crabbing around. However, it takes weeks! The only thing to do is to keep the humidity in the tank high enough for the crab and hope it has no issues while molting.

There is one thing that is quite easy though, food!
Hermit crabs are scavengers and will eat almost anything, they do prefer fruits and vegetables, dried shrimp and a favourite....popcorn. I'm sure they'd eat a bit of fish, but they don't eat much in one sitting and I'd rather not have raw fish stinking up the house!

This spring I may try to get a few more crabs to add to the habitat to keep Posiedon company. The big one is doing quite well and could potentially live for 15 years or more!

Bonus picture of a crab fossil!

A mud crab from 50 million years ago!


Comments and feedback are always welcome.

Please upvote and follow to see the next installment in your feed!

Resteem if you think your followers would enjoy this post, thanks!


Also, if you like macro photography, check out some of the earlier posts in this series.

Little Monsters - Part I: Wolf Spiders
Little Monsters - Part II: Golden Orb Weaver
Little Monsters - Part III: Lynx Spiders!
Little Monsters - Part IV: Decorator Orb Weaver
Little Monsters - Part V: Black Back Paper Wasp
Little Monsters - Part VI: Dragonfly
Little Monsters - Part VII: Indian Fritallary
Little Monsters - Part VIII: Giant Japanese Hornet
Little Monsters - Part IX: Praying Mantis!
Little Monsters - Part X: Harlequin Ladybird!
Little Monsters - Part XI: Dragons!
Little Monsters - Part XII: Snails!
Little Monsters - Part XIII: Evil Weevils!
Little Monsters - Part XIV: Fantastic Phasmids!
Little Monsters - Part XV: To Bee or not to Bee?
Little Monsters - Part 16: Jumping Spiders!
Little Monsters - Part 17: Hawkmoth Caterpillars and Hawkmoths
Little Monsters - Part 18: Evil Doppelgangers - The Ant Mimic Spider
Little Monsters - Part 19: Hummingbird Hawkmoth!
Little Monsters - Part 20: Loud and Proud the Cicada!
Little Monsters - Part 21: Great Green Caterpillars!
Little Monsters - Part 22: Vespa mandarina japonica
Little Monsters - Part 23: Little Black Ants
Little Monsters - Part 24: Cranes and Robbers
Little Monsters - Part 25: Hidden in the Grass
Little Monsters - Part 26: Ammophila, Alien is real!
Little Monsters - Part 27: Bush Cricket
Little Monsters - Part 28: Butterflies, flying bits of colour!

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How wonderful!
A few years ago, I bought two crayfish (crawfish?). They were billed as 'blue lobster' and were cute.

They bred, so 'Ronnie' and 'Reggie' were not the same sex as we'd thought. They killed everything they could lay their claws on and eventually had to have their own tank.

When they had babies, it was fascinating! The eggs clung to the mother for a while and then tiny (and I mean grain of sand tiny) crayfish went patrolling across the bottom of their tank.

Yes, I've kept a few crayfish one summer. They eat a lot, anything that's smaller than they are! And grow very fast too. The two I had didn't breed, those little crayfish must have been something to see!

Oh they were! The parent that survived longest grew to around 9 inches.

Oh, wow! That is huge!

The wonderful crab!

Really nice photos as always. Hermit crabs are indeed delicate creatures, and adorable. Have you captured any shots of them outside their shells? that crab fossil is so cool! By the way, you liked my last experimental beat, i just posted another one for this week"s CollaborativeArtJourney for @everlove"s community project, hopefully you like the new beat Shattered Rainbows, broken skies as well.

I haven't caught any out of their shells, they are pretty shy creatures. I do have a not so great shot of the smallest one climbing up the silicon sealing though, it's almost of of the shell.
I was amazed at that crab fossil too, it's even cooler in person. I guess being a mud crab, it got buried in a great condition to fossilize!

I did like the last song, I'll check out the new one now!

Thanks you should maybe do a post on the biggest crabs in the world, that would be pretty amazing to see their massive powerful claws, like the Tasmanian King Crab, or the 12 foot long Japanese Crab that looks like a hard-shelled spider. You have so many great options. Thanks for checking out my new beat!

They've got those crabs, Japanese spider crabs, at the aquarium here!

That's great news, now you can plan your next amazing documentary study post about them! I look forward to reading it

They are pretty :-)

Thank you very much @boddhisattva!

I'm thinking of getting some hermit crabs for my youngest boy for Christmas.

Cool, do some research first!

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