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Hermit Crab, Dardanus species
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Hermit crabs scuttle about the sea-floor using someone else’s shell for a home. They always use empty shells and never kill the original occupant.
When the crab becomes to large for its shell, it looks for another. When it finds a likely looking one it will try it on. If the shell doesn’t fit, or is too heavy, the crab returns to its old shell and continues it search.
Where there is a large population of hermit crabs and a shortage of shells, the crab will accept a sub-standard home: maybe a cracked or uncomfortable shell. But in good conditions it will be very particular about the new shell it chooses. Two hermit crabs will fight for the possession of an empty shell, or even a shell inhabited by one of the
combitants.
Some of the Dardanas species of Hermit crab stick sea anemones on their shells. This camoflauges the crab and the stinging cells of the anemone protects the crab from
predators such as octopus.
The anemone also benefits from the arrangement. It becomes effortlessly mobile and shares the crab’s meals.
Dardanas species are nocturnal with dark-adapted eyes. Look out for them on night-dives in the Indian and Pacific oceans.