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Massachusetts
Related: About this forumHorseshoe crabs spawn with wild abandon as state rolls out new protections
https://www.wbur.org/news/2024/05/31/horseshoe-crabs-spawning-survey-massachusetts-cape-cod(04:54 min. audio, more photos at link)
Horseshoe crabs spawn with wild abandon as state rolls out new protections
May 31, 2024
Barbara Moran
Horseshoe crabs during breeding season in Orleans. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)
Horseshoe crabs are not endangered or threatened in Massachusetts, but their numbers are at historic lows. To protect the species, state wildlife officials are rolling out new regulations. As of 2024, horseshoe crabs can no longer be harvested in Massachusetts during spring spawning season, from April to June.
The state's horseshoe crab population has declined for several reasons, according to Mark Faherty, science coordinator for Mass Audubon's Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary. For decades they were considered pests; kids on Cape Cod could get a couple of pennies for each crab they killed tossing it in the dunes to die and snapping off its tail as proof for town officials. "They were worth more dead than alive," Faherty said.
Today, horseshoe crabs are harvested for bait in the whelk fishing industry, and for use by biomedical companies. A protein in their pale blue blood is used in a test for bacterial toxins in medical products.
But they are also valuable players in coastal ecosystems. Horseshoe crab eggs, especially, are a vital food source for migrating shorebirds like the near-threatened red knot.
[...]
May 31, 2024
Barbara Moran
Horseshoe crabs during breeding season in Orleans. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)
Horseshoe crabs are not endangered or threatened in Massachusetts, but their numbers are at historic lows. To protect the species, state wildlife officials are rolling out new regulations. As of 2024, horseshoe crabs can no longer be harvested in Massachusetts during spring spawning season, from April to June.
The state's horseshoe crab population has declined for several reasons, according to Mark Faherty, science coordinator for Mass Audubon's Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary. For decades they were considered pests; kids on Cape Cod could get a couple of pennies for each crab they killed tossing it in the dunes to die and snapping off its tail as proof for town officials. "They were worth more dead than alive," Faherty said.
Today, horseshoe crabs are harvested for bait in the whelk fishing industry, and for use by biomedical companies. A protein in their pale blue blood is used in a test for bacterial toxins in medical products.
But they are also valuable players in coastal ecosystems. Horseshoe crab eggs, especially, are a vital food source for migrating shorebirds like the near-threatened red knot.
[...]
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Horseshoe crabs spawn with wild abandon as state rolls out new protections (Original Post)
sl8
Jun 2024
OP
2naSalit
(92,662 posts)1. They need protection...
Along the entire east coast.
paleotn
(19,177 posts)2. Oh, the things they and their kin have seen. A link back into deep time and one of my favorites critters.
Their order, recognizable horseshoe crabs, dates back to the Ordovician 400+ million years ago. They've seen life colonize the land, the rise and fall of dinosaurs, the rise of mammals, and multiple mass extinction events, including the near "slate wiper, Permian extinction. Yet here they are. The common ancestor of existing species dates to the early Cretaceous. Beautiful creatures! Lets protect them as much as possible.
eppur_se_muova
(37,388 posts)3. And here we've been practically trying to wipe them out ... nt
bahboo
(16,953 posts)4. party on, crabs.....