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Thank you, JulesRolyCrab, for picking up on that second post! I didn't see it when I replied about the dropped crab.JulesRolyCrab wrote:Listen to Crabinski, your crab should be fine!![]()
I'm not trying to jump on your case, I just want to make sure that your new crab can live happily; one thing that you said in your 2nd comment, that you have a 10 gallon w/ 4 crabs and 2 1/2 inches of substrate. Moving your crabs into the 20 gallon as soon as possible would be best. 4 crabs in a 10 gallon is overcrowding. Also, at least 6 inches of substrate is thought of as the bare minimum for your crabbies, to help with safe molts protected from other. But if your new crab is big, as you said, you might want more substrate. Good luck, and I'm glad your new hermie is doing well!
Crabinski wrote:Breathe, relax and don't worry! The same thing has happened to other crabbers, myself included: one of my crabs jumped from my hand and landed on the floor (carpet over cement) 4 feet below -- he was a little stunned and stayed tucked into his shell for a few minutes but was moving around the tank quite normally very quickly -- that was almost 7 years ago and he's still absolutely fine! Remember that these crabs climb trees in the wild and undoubtedly fall out of them, too.
Thanks for the advice as well! This is why I got a new tank so they wouldn't feel overcrowdedJulesRolyCrab wrote:Listen to Crabinski, your crab should be fine!![]()
I'm not trying to jump on your case, I just want to make sure that your new crab can live happily; one thing that you said in your 2nd comment, that you have a 10 gallon w/ 4 crabs and 2 1/2 inches of substrate. Moving your crabs into the 20 gallon as soon as possible would be best. 4 crabs in a 10 gallon is overcrowding. Also, at least 6 inches of substrate is thought of as the bare minimum for your crabbies, to help with safe molts protected from other. But if your new crab is big, as you said, you might want more substrate. Good luck, and I'm glad your new hermie is doing well!