It seems that nothing is wrong with him living alone so should I keep it that way or should I follow what the care guide says and give him a roommate?
I just want Blackberry to be happy and live a long life.
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Yes, I would say that he’d need another crab, as they are social. They tend to kill others in a shell fight, after molting, or because they smell like an intruder. There are certain things that need to be followed when getting new crabs.marymary wrote:Hi there, I have a 3~4 year old hermit crab in a 10 gallon tank at my office. It is the size of golf ball and has been living alone for almost 2 years since he killed his last roommate (he clipped the poor guy's shell into pieces). Since this is an office pet, I cannot go beyond 10 gallon. For the last 2 years he seems to be quite active and eats A LOT and molted 3 or 4 times. He also changes shell often just for fun (they are same sizes), so my question is:
It seems that nothing is wrong with him living alone so should I keep it that way or should I follow what the care guide says and give him a roommate?
I just want Blackberry to be happy and live a long life.
I wanted to point out that the attacks for shells and post molting are not super common, unless you don't provide enough shells or your substrate isn't very deep.StellaCrab wrote:Yes, I would say that he’d need another crab, as they are social. They tend to kill others in a shell fight, after molting, or because they smell like an intruder. There are certain things that need to be followed when getting new crabs.marymary wrote:Hi there, I have a 3~4 year old hermit crab in a 10 gallon tank at my office. It is the size of golf ball and has been living alone for almost 2 years since he killed his last roommate (he clipped the poor guy's shell into pieces). Since this is an office pet, I cannot go beyond 10 gallon. For the last 2 years he seems to be quite active and eats A LOT and molted 3 or 4 times. He also changes shell often just for fun (they are same sizes), so my question is:
It seems that nothing is wrong with him living alone so should I keep it that way or should I follow what the care guide says and give him a roommate?
I just want Blackberry to be happy and live a long life.
You must dip the new one into the freshwater pool of the crabitat, then they won’t smell like a different crab which would lead to an attack.
They must also be offered extra shells, which the recommended number is at least three extras per crab, with many more being recommended.
Yes, I really haven’t ever dipped my new ones into the pool, but I haven’t bought a crab since last summer. I also have never experienced much aggression, only shell steals after my crab had issues molting.soilentgringa wrote:I wanted to point out that the attacks for shells and post molting are not super common, unless you don't provide enough shells or your substrate isn't very deep.StellaCrab wrote:Yes, I would say that he’d need another crab, as they are social. They tend to kill others in a shell fight, after molting, or because they smell like an intruder. There are certain things that need to be followed when getting new crabs.marymary wrote:Hi there, I have a 3~4 year old hermit crab in a 10 gallon tank at my office. It is the size of golf ball and has been living alone for almost 2 years since he killed his last roommate (he clipped the poor guy's shell into pieces). Since this is an office pet, I cannot go beyond 10 gallon. For the last 2 years he seems to be quite active and eats A LOT and molted 3 or 4 times. He also changes shell often just for fun (they are same sizes), so my question is:
It seems that nothing is wrong with him living alone so should I keep it that way or should I follow what the care guide says and give him a roommate?
I just want Blackberry to be happy and live a long life.
You must dip the new one into the freshwater pool of the crabitat, then they won’t smell like a different crab which would lead to an attack.
They must also be offered extra shells, which the recommended number is at least three extras per crab, with many more being recommended.
A lot of times crabs are gone for several weeks to months to molt and when they reemerge there can be little scuffles between the crabs which is totally normal. As long as you aren't witnessing active aggression like open pincher grabbing of limbs, they'll usually go on about their business.
HCA does not officially recommend dipping them in the freshwater when introducing to a new tank or post molt. Some crabbers have found it to be helpful but that's just anecdotal evidence so far.
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Well that doesn't make sense. The other crab was much smaller so they don't need the same shell and I had a dozen shells in there. Why would Blackberry want to steal the shell of a much smaller crab anyway. Blackberry just pinched the shell of the smaller crab into pieces... And no they were not molting. I did see some aggression from Blackberry thou; he climbed onto the smaller crab and they seemed to be balling up and struggling and in a few days, the smaller one died outside of his shell with his shell in pieces...soilentgringa wrote:I wanted to point out that the attacks for shells and post molting are not super common, unless you don't provide enough shells or your substrate isn't very deep.StellaCrab wrote:Yes, I would say that he’d need another crab, as they are social. They tend to kill others in a shell fight, after molting, or because they smell like an intruder. There are certain things that need to be followed when getting new crabs.marymary wrote:Hi there, I have a 3~4 year old hermit crab in a 10 gallon tank at my office. It is the size of golf ball and has been living alone for almost 2 years since he killed his last roommate (he clipped the poor guy's shell into pieces). Since this is an office pet, I cannot go beyond 10 gallon. For the last 2 years he seems to be quite active and eats A LOT and molted 3 or 4 times. He also changes shell often just for fun (they are same sizes), so my question is:
It seems that nothing is wrong with him living alone so should I keep it that way or should I follow what the care guide says and give him a roommate?
I just want Blackberry to be happy and live a long life.
You must dip the new one into the freshwater pool of the crabitat, then they won’t smell like a different crab which would lead to an attack.
They must also be offered extra shells, which the recommended number is at least three extras per crab, with many more being recommended.
A lot of times crabs are gone for several weeks to months to molt and when they reemerge there can be little scuffles between the crabs which is totally normal. As long as you aren't witnessing active aggression like open pincher grabbing of limbs, they'll usually go on about their business.
HCA does not officially recommend dipping them in the freshwater when introducing to a new tank or post molt. Some crabbers have found it to be helpful but that's just anecdotal evidence so far.
Sent from my LGMS550 using Tapatalk
A lot of factors could have affected the crabs behavior.marymary wrote:Well that doesn't make sense. The other crab was much smaller so they don't need the same shell and I had a dozen shells in there. Why would Blackberry want to steal the shell of a much smaller crab anyway. Blackberry just pinched the shell of the smaller crab into pieces... And no they were not molting. I did see some aggression from Blackberry thou; he climbed onto the smaller crab and they seemed to be balling up and struggling and in a few days, the smaller one died outside of his shell with his shell in pieces...soilentgringa wrote:I wanted to point out that the attacks for shells and post molting are not super common, unless you don't provide enough shells or your substrate isn't very deep.StellaCrab wrote: Yes, I would say that he’d need another crab, as they are social. They tend to kill others in a shell fight, after molting, or because they smell like an intruder. There are certain things that need to be followed when getting new crabs.
You must dip the new one into the freshwater pool of the crabitat, then they won’t smell like a different crab which would lead to an attack.
They must also be offered extra shells, which the recommended number is at least three extras per crab, with many more being recommended.
A lot of times crabs are gone for several weeks to months to molt and when they reemerge there can be little scuffles between the crabs which is totally normal. As long as you aren't witnessing active aggression like open pincher grabbing of limbs, they'll usually go on about their business.
HCA does not officially recommend dipping them in the freshwater when introducing to a new tank or post molt. Some crabbers have found it to be helpful but that's just anecdotal evidence so far.
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I feel like this is something to take into consideration as well. My oldest crabs lived alone for years before they came to me.wodesorel wrote:I know this won't be a popular opinion, but if the crab is active and healthy and your limit is a 10 gallon, I would not recommend getting a second. That's asking a lot from a crab that has already exhibited odd behaviour around its own kind, and a 10 won't give medium crabs much space to themsleves. Plus, two crabs are likely to outgrow that tank in a couple of years.