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Maritime Aquarium Needs Volunteers To Tag Horseshoe Crabs

NORWALK, Conn. – One of nature’s oldest beach mating rituals is about to resume, and The Maritime Aquarium at Norwalk needs help documenting it. The Aquarium is seeking volunteers to help attach census tags to horseshoe crabs as the crabs come up out of the water to spawn at Calf Pasture Beach this spring.

Maritime Aquarium educator Joe Schnierlein demonstrates how to harmlessly attach a census tag to a horseshoe crab at Calf Pasture Beach.

Maritime Aquarium educator Joe Schnierlein demonstrates how to harmlessly attach a census tag to a horseshoe crab at Calf Pasture Beach.

Photo Credit: Contributed

To participate, new volunteers must attend one of two training sessions at the Aquarium: Wednesday at 7 p.m. or Sunday, May 15 at 7 p.m. Volunteers will learn about the natural history of horseshoe crabs, what has been learned so far from the census work and how to harmlessly tag horseshoe crabs. 

Volunteers should be in 10th grade or older. Younger children can assist if working with a parent, teacher or guardian. If you’ve helped tag crabs before, you don’t have to attend the training sessions. Volunteers also must be able to be up before dawn and/or out after midnight for the crab-tagging sessions at Calf Pasture Beach in May and June.

It’s all part of a census of horseshoe crabs in Long Island Sound, led by Jennifer Mattei of Sacred Heart University, with the Maritime Aquarium assisting. Mattei’s census is establishing a baseline crab population and will reveal horseshoe crab migrations and any changes in numbers or behaviors. The data is needed because horseshoe crab eggs are an important food source for migrating shorebirds. If the horseshoe crab population declined, that could mean fewer birds on the coastline. Horseshoe crabs come up onto beaches on the nights of the spring full and new moons. 

“This is the perfect ‘citizen scientist’ activity – one that lets volunteers engage in real marine science, while also helping us to collect more data than would be possible by a single researcher,” said Aquarium spokesman Dave Sigworth. “Taggings are an especially great experience for teenagers interested in a career in marine biology. Plus, it’s just fun.”

To sign up or for more details about the training and taggings, call The Maritime Aquarium at 203-852-0700, ext. 2304, or e-mail jschnierlein@maritimeaquarium.org.

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