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Scientists in bid to help sea creatures that survived the dinosaurs deal with modern life

The creatures are known as ‘living fossils’

Reuters
Joyce Zhou
Wednesday 21 February 2024 12:38 GMT
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Horseshoe Crabs spawn during at Pickering Beach in Dover
Horseshoe Crabs spawn during at Pickering Beach in Dover (Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Conservationists in Hong Kong are tracking endangered horseshoe crabs, which date back to before the dinosaurs, in a bid to help them survive the perils of modern life.

The spine-tailed sea creatures named for the shape of their body shells face numerous threats, including the loss of nursery beaches for baby crabs, entanglement in fishing nets and human exploitation for food.

They are known as “living fossils”, serving an important role in coastal ecology, the understanding of evolutionary science as well as being a major food source for wading birds.

Of four species worldwide, the Chinese horseshoe crab (tachypleus tridentatus) and the mangrove horseshoe crab (carcinoscorpis rotundicauda) are found in Hong Kong coastal waters.

The Ocean Park Conservation Foundation (OPCFHK) said it had initiated the first underwater automated acoustic “telemetry system” for a pilot tracking study.

Gulls gather around horseshoe crabs spawning at Reeds Beach in Cape May Court House (Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

The team released an initial batch of tagged adult crabs into Tung Chung Bay, near the airport, on Wednesday and will track and investigate movement and breeding patterns.

“Our commitment is to ensure the continuous breeding and survival of local horseshoe crabs in the wild,” said Howard Chuk, foundation director of OPCFHK.

The local population of juvenile horseshoe crabs is estimated to be less than 10,000, while data on the adult population is inadequate, making it difficult to accurately estimate their numbers, OPCFHK said.

Rising water levels due to global warming could also exacerbate loss of habitat with Hong Kong’s beaches at risk of being submerged in future, said Professor Cheung Siu-gin, associate professor at the Department of Chemistry at City University, Hong Kong.

“The measurement of water temperature in this study can also indirectly monitor the situation of global warming.”

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