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Uncategorized Friday, October 26th 2012 at 4:05 pm

Hermit Crabs Form Gangs To Kick Out Owners, Steal Most Desirable Real Estate

Life in the wilderness — be it tundra, forest or beach — is no bowl of cherries. Hermit crabs, though, make things extra tough on one another. Always on the lookout for a new home, smaller hermit crabs will form gangs to kick their larger kin out of the big comfy shells they’re residing in. Once they have, every smaller crab in the team moves up a shell size, leaving the once well-protected crab nothing but a walking tasty treat for a variety of predators.

The Straw Dogs style home invasion tactic has been observed in terrestrial hermit crabs, which makes sense, as the sorts of larger shells a crab can build a home and plan for a family in are plentiful in the ocean, but at a premium on dry land. Bigger shells are important because they let hermits grow into their larger abode and carry more eggs, increasing the chances that they’ll breed successfully. Taken together, these factors make for one of the most cutthroat real estate markets on the planet.

Rather than look for a big shell that’s unoccupied, smaller hermits take a more bullying track — look for another crab wearing a big shell already, and then take his. To do that, though, the hermits need to do something very un-hermit-like and assemble a posse. That posse then forms a congo line, from largest to smallest crabs, which works as one unit, eventually tugging the largest crab out of its shell. Once the largest shell is open, its a free for all, with every crab scrambling to get into the largest shell available to them while leaving the unsuspecting crab that’s just been evicted out in the cold, an easy meal for anything that eats hermit crabs on a beach where things that eat hermit crabs are pretty much the rule.

The research is surprising for a couple of reasons. First, it’s an odd case of a notably solitary creature — you don’t get “hermit” in your name by being gregarious, after all — evolving a social means of dealing with a problem. Even weirder, it’s a social activity that actually drives up predation in a species, which is almost unheard of. Finally, it’s evidence that some animals, like some people, are just plain jerks.

(via EurekAlert)

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  • Axess Denyd

    Apparently hermit crabs are liberals.

  • Lee Larsen

    So, what’s the big deal? Man has been doing the same thing for eons, just on a larger scale. Can’t we just all get along? This is all tongue-in-cheek. Hope no one takes me seriously.

  • Zeus de Crete

    apparently everything in this fledgling republic has become political. in that case, the dethroned hermit is the conservative? yeah, you’re probably right: oversize/overweight, old, and lacking any sense of cooperation with others.

  • Anonymous

    I like the ending, don’t know if you did this on purpose but it is very close to a line from the Simpsons episode “Bart Gets an Elephant”. The line is at the very end where the caretaker of an animal sanctuary says to Marge after they watch Stampy head butt and bully another Elephant “but, like people, some of them[animals] are just jerks.”

  • Anonymous

    No crap, it’s a joke that people have nothing better to say than, just bring up politics into every fricken situation…

  • Anonymous

    What?

  • Honyock

    Ravens do it too, except they do it for food. See Berndt Heinrich “Ravens in Winter”.

  • Lee Larsen

    It’s an election year, maybe we’ll all get our sanity back when it’s over. :)

  • Anonymous

    If you are at all familiar with alternate side parking in NYC, it’s a very similar dance. Every car on the block waits for the street sweeper to arrive and then moves in unison to the other side of the street to allow the sweeper to pass through. As soon as the sweeper passes by it’s a free for all when every car scrambles back to the other side for a now legal spot, some in reverse, some in drive, utter madness. Some get spots when the music stops, some don’t and some get dents. Ruthless, just like the crabs.

  • http://twitter.com/WritersWithCats Paul and Paula

    Huh. So it’s a lot like Detroit then. =) (Go Tigers!)

  • Anonymous

    In other words they are blacks.

  • air

    I saw this in action on the beach of a small volcanic island southwest of Samoa last year- dozens of hermit crabs down to pin-sized jostling together – very cool to watch

  • TnAFan

    No. They’re white trash such as yourself.

  • Anonymous

    Sounds quite humorous since I don’t have to deal with anything like that, but sounds quite terrible and unfriendly.

  • Anonymous

    Oh, somebody must love you…

  • http://www.facebook.com/ian.chant Ian Chant

    I love that line. Was going to link, but the only clip is really bad, and I figured the giant Simpsons nerds it was pointed at would get it anyway. Thanks for proving me right!