
Appearance
common intertidal hermit crab is most easily distinguished by the light blue raised dots on the chelipeds and walking legs, plus the unbanded orange or red antennae. The legs of young individuals may be yellow. Carapace to 1.9 cm.Naming
Eupagurus granosimanusDistribution
Unalaska, Aleutian Islands, Alaska to Bahia de Todos Santos, Baja CaliforniaBehavior
This species is often found in Tegula funebralis, Searlesia dira or Nucella lamellosa shells. Small individuals live in Littorina shells. It seems to prefer shells large enough that it can completely withdraw inside. It lives lower in the intertidal than does P. hirsutiusculus but higher than P. beringanus. This is said to be the smallest intertidal hermit crab to be found in Puget Sound, but I have not noticed it being particularly small. Predators include the black prickleback, Xiphister atropurpureus. The species is active mainly in the afternoon and night, and sometimes can be found in large aggregations on shallow sand bottoms.Habitat
Rocky, cobbles, and among algae.Reproduction
They produce 3 broods per year in the Puget Sound area. The females carry their eggs for about 55 days, and the planktonic zoea/megalops stages last about 70 days.References:
Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.
https://inverts.wallawalla.edu/Arthropoda/Crustacea/Malacostraca/Eumalacostraca/Eucarida/Decapoda/Anomura/Family_Paguridae/Pagurus_granosimanus.html