Naturally Kiawah Guest Edition 2014 | Page 10

Helmets on the Beach Article and photographs by Pamela Cohen The horseshoe crab, Limulus polyphemus, a “living fossil,” miraculously exists as a marvel of evolution unmodified for over 300 million years. Despite the name, this unique creature is not a crab, but a marine arthropod related to arachnids. If you are an amateur rock collector, perhaps you have a trilobite fossil. Trilobites are relatives and similar in appearance to horseshoe crabs. A casual walk on the coast, anywhere from Maine to the Yucatan Peninsula, yields sightings, seen as hard brown shells strewn upon the sand. It is a creature that intrigues curious children, prompting them to ask, “What is that thing? It looks like a helmet with a tail!” Often mistaken for a dead specimen is the remnant of a molt. Do not be apprehensive about being near a live horseshoe crab on the beach. There is nothing to fear, since it has no teeth, it cannot bite, nor does it sting. The sharp pointed tail is not used for defense but as an implement to aid in turning itself over and for steering. The leathery looking shell, or carapace, is horseshoe shaped and may have protrusions which protect young from predators. The female presents 30% larger than the male. If you carefully pick up a specimen on Kiawah beach, it can be quite a learning experience. Feel honored that you are holding a creature that existed before dinosaurs and man. There are 10 eyes, two lateral, located on the top of 7 the shell, the remaining positioned dorsally and ventrally, including a photoreceptor on the tail. Although appearing primitive, its eyes are engineered to function as “high tech” photoreceptors. A nocturnal chemical response triggers lateral eyes to become sensitive to light, allowing them to visualize other horseshoe crabs. They can detect both UV light and illumination from the moon. This ability keeps them in sync with the lunar cycle, which is crucial to spawning. The underside of the shell consists of six pairs of appendages, all but one with a claw, the majority aiding in mobility. Two shorter ones, centrally located, help move food into the mouth. Below those are a series of book gills. Horseshoe crabs are of vital importance when considering two facets: their eggs as a food source and their blood as a contribution to the medical industry. In Delaware Bay, horseshoe crabs spawn, leaving thousands of nutrient-rich eggs. Many of these eggs are devoured by hungry shorebirds, particularly semipalmated sandpipers, ruddy turnstones, and red knots passing on feeding binges during migration.