Do Marine Hermit Crabs Kill Snails For Their Shells?

A hermit crab inside a crown conch shell while the snail is still inside makes me question what is going on here?

From everything I’ve read about hermit crabs, the consensus is that they don’t harm snails. They wait to find an empty shell and then move in.

When beach-combing, I see far more hermit crabs inside shells than actual live conchs and whelks, or the snails which made the shell. I find that odd, since there is quite a good ecosystem out on the mud flats. Very few people mess with beach nature out there. Visitors prefer the ocean beaches, and even the boaters either fish or sit and enjoy the tranquility found on a little sandy beach away from crowds.

It’s curious that I don’t see many more living snails. Then, I came upon this unusual scene.

Hermit Crabs and the Crown Conch

We pulled up to a little island the other day and as soon as I stepped out of the boat I saw this cluster of hermit crabs. A cluster of hermits in various shells is a regular sight, but one of the shells had a conch inside. And when I looked closer, I saw something I’d never seen before.

gathering of hermit crabs
Many hermit crabs surround a crown conch snail

One hermit was already inside the conch shell. The other hermit was on top of the shell and looking for access. Watch my short video of these hermits with the conch snail, which is not the greatest, but shows what is happening in the picture above.

A hermit crab had crawled down inside the shell – even though the conch was still inside! I don’t know if the conch was alive but the shell was not vacant. It appeared to me that the hermit crab was shoving the snail out of it’s home.

If this is the case, then did the hermit crab kill the conch? It would also explain the abundance of hermit crabs in the area. After all, if they have to sit around and wait for an empty shell, it could be a long wait. Why not just oust the snail and grab the shell?

hermit inside a live conch
Both the conch and hermit crab inside the shell!

I took a bunch of photos and have chosen the best to share here. You can see the legs of the striped hermit crab holding on, and wrapping round, the snail. I don’t know if the snail is still alive, but the crab pushed it’s way in even though the shell was occupied by the shell-maker. Did the snail die (for some reason – and was not eaten) and the crab was disposing of the body? Or did that crab cause the snail’s death?

The crown conch snail has black splotches, which can be seen in these pictures, although the foot seems shriveled (see my photo below of a live crown conch snail). The hermit crab was tucked way down behind the conch. I touched it’s legs and it didn’t care. He held on tightly to the snail, which also was not moving.

The Black Speckled Foot of the Crown Conch

The foot can be seen on another crown conch that I found a while back. In the photo below the foot is emerging from the spiky shell. That conch was alive, and it leads me to believe that the one pictured above may have been dead. The foot is yellowed and shrunken. But, did the snail die on it’s own, or did the hermit crab have something to do with that?

crown conch foot
Photo of a living crown conch snail – see the black speckled foot

The Mighty Grip of the Hermit Crab

By the way, those hermit crabs have a mighty grip. Not long ago we visited this same island and I saw many big tulip shells. One shell had a hermit crab inside who was tightly holding onto a pear whelk. It seemed that the pear was empty, and the hermit had such a tight grip that I could hold these shells off the ground by pulling on the tip of the whelk. He was not going to let that shell go!

I can’t imagine why, since the hermit was already in a very nice shell. Do they covet every empty shell they see? There may have been another hermit crab inside the pear whelk, but I didn’t see one. Almost all hermit crabs I see are the striped variety.

hermit inside tulip holding pear

So my question is, do hermit crabs kill marine snails just to take over their shells? I’m not sure why a snail would simply die. Aren’t they usually eaten by birds or other snails? Of course, I don’t know and maybe snails do die of other causes.

Then again, if hermit crabs are killers, it would explain the huge number of them living inside seashells in this area. More observation and investigation, on my part, is needed. One thing is for sure. Both the hermit crab and snail were in the shell at the same time.

Answering the Question – Maybe

The book Spirals in Time, The Secret Life and Curious Afterlife of Seashells (this is an Amazon affiliate link) has some information about hermit crabs. On page 138, the author Helen Scales writes, “The one thing that hermit crabs never do is kill the occupant of a shell before moving in.” She is a marine biologist based in England.

I believe in scientific studies, but isn’t it possible that a few hermit crabs may have gone rogue and become impatient with waiting for snails to die? They have claws. And some of the hermit crabs I’ve seen are pretty large.

With a large population of hermit crabs in the area, finding empty shells to inhabit must be tough. Maybe the hermit crabs in this area are desperate enough to become resourceful in new ways. They will die without a shell to live in.

In closing, never buy hermit crabs as pets, or pick one up from the beach to take home. Being in captivity shortens their life, by a lot. And their existence is miserable compared to being in the wild. Read more about why it’s a bad idea here.

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Video of Big Hermit Crab in the Wild

While searching the backwater beach at low tide, I found a big lightning whelk shell encrusted with barnacles. I thought that either it was alive, with the snail inside, or a hermit crab had taken up residence. It turned out to be the latter.

Most of the time hermit crabs will quickly duck down deep inside the shell when they see me approach. I decided to sneak up on this one, just in case. I slowly lifted the shell and the hermit didn’t seem to notice I was there. I continued to take video with my phone while lifting the shell.

A second hermit crab was under the larger one. It was in a banded tulip shell and the big hermit was reaching for it! See the video I took below. It is unusual for a hermit to hang out of it’s shell like this! You can see the barnacles on his back and he really wanted to hang onto that other shell.

I’ve seen hermit crabs gather before and it seems they are trying to roll each other’s shell, like maybe they are checking it out. This large crab could not have been interested in taking the smaller shell, so I have no idea what he was doing.

Once I got my video, I let go of the shell and both crabs popped back inside their shells (photo right).

On this day, I saw quite a few very large hermit crabs. Most were hidden inside the shells. They can stay tucked down inside for a very long time. The shell parts that were in the mud were bright orange but the rest of the shell was covered in muddy barnacles.

All of these very large crabs were inside lightning whelks. This shell is easy to identify by it’s left-side opening. The shell can be very pretty, but as you can see most of these shells are covered in growth and mud. The snails that made the shells have died, and hermit crabs and barnacles have moved in.


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“A Drop in the Ocean” is a Book Worth Reading


I love to find a book to read that I really enjoy and “A Drop in the Ocean“, written by Jenni Ogden, is one such book.   The author lives on a remote, “off the grid” island near New Zealand. She had some real life experiences to draw from, and she makes you believe in the places and people she writes about. This story is unique and original and well written.

This book contains an affiliate link to Amazon where you can buy it for a Kindle, in hardcover or paperback. I could earn money if you decide to purchase it through this link.

But, I am not advertising the book to make money. I sincerely enjoyed this book.

I seldom go by reader reviews because some people give great reviews to junk. We all like different things, and what may appeal to me, won’t appeal to you.  I like unusual stories written by intelligent people.  This story is one of those. If you love the sea and the creatures in it, this book is worth a read.

Often I don’t fall for choosing a book because it has “beach” or “ocean” in the title. Sometimes titles can pull you in and you find your time wasted reading useless drivel.

In this case, A Drop in the Ocean really does have to do with a tropical paradise and the ocean and creatures in it. I especially love the parts of the book about watching and tagging the sea turtles.  

Here is a green sea turtle photo, which the author mentions in the book.

green sea turtle
Green Sea Turtle (photo credit: Pixabay)

The story is fiction, but the remote style of island living is totally believable. It is set on a small island on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef. The woman at the center of the story is a loner, accustomed to living for her career without time for dating, marriage and family. Then, an opportunity arises which changes her forever.

I live near the ocean, but nothing like this.  Imagine walking out your door and putting on snorkeling gear to swim among the creatures of the ocean every day!  I don’t want to say more, except that her writing flows along and draws me in.

Photos of Creatures and Trees Mentioned in the Book

When you read A Drop in the Ocean you may be tempted to discover photos of places and animals described. I managed to find some of these things at Pixabay and have posted them below.

I am trusting the tags mentioned, by each photographer, to describe each photo correctly.

Shearwater birds
Shearwater birds
white heron
White Heron
Casuarina trees
Casuarina trees
Clown fish
Clown Fish

The jungle beach photo at the beginning of this page is an Image by grebmot from Pixabay.