Glossary | Horseshoe Crab Home | Education Home | Fisheries Home | DNR Home
Life History of the Horseshoe Crab
 Life History
     Evolution
     Species
     Life Cycle
     Spawning
     Shore Birds
 Anatomy
 The Fishery
 Conservation
 Medical Uses
 Raising
 Horseshoe Crabs
 How You Can Help
 Fisheries Home
Horseshoe Crabs on the beach. SPAWNING
Horseshoe crabs are well known for their highly visible mating activities. Spawning in the Chesapeake and Coastal Bays usually begins in late May when large numbers of adults move onto beaches to mate and lay eggs. The peak in spawning activity usually coincides with a 3 or 4-day period centered on the new and full moon and evening spring tides. View a graph of the peak spawning periods.

Spawning adults prefer beach areas within bays and coves that are protected from rough water.

Preferred beaches are also close to tidal flats that offer an ample supply of food for juvenile horseshoe crabs. In addition, beaches need to have well oxygenated sediments that allow deposited eggs to develop.

Two crabs spawning with eggs present on the beach Horseshoe crab eggs Eggs are laid in clusters or nests along the beach in a broad band between high and low tide marks. Several nests are made during one beach trip and females will return on successive tides to lay more eggs. Females can produce 80,000 to 100,000 eggs per year.

During a spawning period, the smaller male crabs will move onto the beach and seek out female crabs at the tide line. They find female horseshoe crabs by the chemical attractants secreted by the females. There is also some evidence that the male horseshoe crab can find females visually.

View of the clasping claw used in mating On the beach, males outnumber females at a ratio of 3 to 1. Males attach to an unattended female using a specialized claw (see photo to the right) used to clasp onto the female’s abdomen. The coupling of horseshoe crabs during spawning is called aplexus. Numerous male horseshoe crabs will cluster around a single female along the tide line. This reduces the chances that the eggs of a spawning female will go unfertilized during a spawning event.

At peak spawning periods, area beaches will sometimes be covered in spawning horseshoe crabs at the tide line. The Delaware Bay beaches contain the highest densities and numbers of horseshoe crabs during a spawning season. Numbers of spawning crabs could reach the 100’s of thousands in the Delaware Bay on a given night. The Chesapeake Bay spawning population is thought to be much lower but thousands of crabs have been seen during peak spawning events. View a chart showing spawning relationships to the lunar cycle.

Fertilization of horseshoe crab eggs occurs externally. The female horseshoe crab digs a nest in the sand at the tide line. Females will sometimes be almost completely buried in the sand. At this time, she will lay up to 4,000 eggs. The attached male will then deposit milt into the sand reaching the eggs. If there are several satellite males surrounding the buried female, they will also contribute sperm to the nest. The female horseshoe crab will move off the nest and return to the water. Female crabs will return to nearby beaches to lay egg masses at least 3 times during the spring spawning season.

Place cursor over highlighted terms for definitions
or use the glossary located at the top of the page.

Additional references...
Night time spawning
Heavy spawning activity
Night time spawning close up
Several horseshoe crab mates surround a
female during spawning
Updated July 29, 2005