Skip to main content
Global Animal Guide

Are Atlantic Horseshoe Crabs Endangered?

Quick answer

Conservation status for atlantic horseshoe crabs is listed here as Vulnerable. Threats, population trends, and what protection means in practice.

By , Founder Last reviewed How we research & review

Key takeaway

Conservation status for atlantic horseshoe crabs is listed here as Vulnerable. Threats, population trends, and what protection means in practice.

Current status

Atlantic Horseshoe Crab (Limulus polyphemus) is recorded in our guides as Vulnerable. IUCN categories describe extinction risk at the global level and can differ from national listings.

Main threats

Habitat loss, hunting or persecution, climate pressure, and conflict with people are common drivers. Exact ranking of threats varies by region.

Population outlook

Where monitoring exists, trends depend on protected-area effectiveness and local enforcement. Fragmented populations need corridors and genetic exchange.

What helps

Support verified conservation programmes, reduce demand for illegal wildlife products, and protect habitat. Tourism only helps when operators follow ethical wildlife standards.

How to read the label

"Endangered" is not the only serious category — Vulnerable and Critically Endangered also signal urgent risk. Domesticated animals are not IUCN-threatened in the same way.

An ancient survivor

Horseshoe crabs are among the oldest animal lineages still living, with fossil relatives dating back hundreds of millions of years, long before the dinosaurs. Their basic body plan has changed remarkably little over that time. Despite the name, they are not true crabs but chelicerates, the same broad group that includes spiders and scorpions.

Body and senses

A horseshoe crab has a smooth, domed shell, several pairs of legs hidden underneath, and a long, pointed tail called a telson that it uses to flip itself upright rather than as a weapon. It has up to ten eyes spread across its body, including large compound eyes used to find mates. The tail and shell are harmless to people despite their fierce appearance.

Diet and spawning

Horseshoe crabs are omnivores that plow through sand and mud searching for worms, mollusks, algae, and carrion, crushing food with the bases of their legs. Each spring, huge numbers gather on beaches to spawn, with females laying thousands of eggs in the sand. These eggs are a critical food source for migrating shorebirds along the Atlantic coast.

Blue blood and conservation

Horseshoe crab blood is blue because it uses copper-based hemocyanin instead of iron-based hemoglobin to carry oxygen. The blood contains a clotting agent used worldwide to test medicines and vaccines for dangerous bacterial contamination, making these animals important to human health. Overharvesting for bait and biomedical use, along with habitat loss, has led to the species being listed as Vulnerable.

Research notes

Figures for atlantic horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphemus) come from field studies, museum records, and conservation assessments that do not always agree on exact averages. Prefer ranges over single-point claims, and check whether a source describes wild, captive, or mixed populations.

Practical takeaways

If you encounter atlantic horseshoe crabs in the wild, prioritise distance and local guidance. If you care for related domestic or captive animals, match diet and housing to species needs rather than generic pet advice. Share accurate status information (Vulnerable) when discussing conservation.

Sources

FAQs

Are Atlantic Horseshoe Crabs Endangered?

Conservation status for atlantic horseshoe crabs is listed here as Vulnerable. Threats, population trends, and what protection means in practice.

What is the scientific name of the atlantic horseshoe crab?

Limulus polyphemus

What do atlantic horseshoe crabs eat?

Omnivore (worms, mollusks, algae, carrion)

Where do atlantic horseshoe crabs live?

Shallow coastal waters and sandy beaches

Are atlantic horseshoe crabs endangered?

Listed here as Vulnerable. Check IUCN and national lists for the latest assessment.

← Back to Atlantic Horseshoe Crab guide