Coenobita perlatus

Coenobita perlatus

''Coenobita perlatus'', is a species of terrestrial hermit crab. It is known as the strawberry hermit crab because of its reddish orange colours. It is a widespread scavenger across the Indo-Pacific, and is also traded to hobby aquarists.
Strawberry Orange Hermit Crab - Coenobita perlatus Land Hermit Crab, orange in colour.

Seen on the beach of a privately owned island, Kureli.

Update : ID as Strawberry Land Hermit Crab - Coenobita perlatus Coenobita perlatus,Crab,Hermit Crab,Land Hermit Crab,Maldives,Strawberry Land Hermit Crab

Appearance

Adults may grow to an average length of 80 mm and a mass of 80 g , and inhabit discarded gastropod shells. They are coloured red or orange; this has led to the species' common name of ''strawberry hermit crab''.
The Alien Hermit To me this hermit crab looks pretty much like an Alien in this photo - And for some reason it makes me remember of the book "The War of the Worlds" Coenobita perlatus,Geotagged,Hermit Crab,Maldives,Strawberry Hermit Crab

Distribution

''C. perlatus'' lives in a wide swathe of the Indo-Pacific, from Mauritius, Seychelles and Aldabra in the west to Samoa in the east. In Australia, the species is limited to Christmas Island, the Cocos Islands, the Great Barrier Reef and the Coral Sea Islands Territory. In the wild, animals may live for 25–30 years, but only live for 1–4 years in captivity.
Purple Hermit Land Hermit Crab, mostly purplish in colour.

Seen among sandy beach on a privately owned island, Kureli.

Update : Colours could be just a variation, likely to be Strawberry Hermit Crab - Coenobita perlatus, which is orangish to pinkish colour. Coenobita perlatus,Crab,Hermit Crab,Maldives,Strawberry Hermit Crab

Behavior

''C. perlatus'' keeps a supply of water in the shell it inhabits. It returns to the sea at night to refresh its water, and it performs osmoregulation by taking appropriate quantities of sea water and fresh water. In the heat of the day, it can bury itself in damp sand as a means of thermoregulation and to prevent water loss. It can also withdraw into its shell and close the aperture with its claws.

''C. perlatus'' is an efficient scavenger, to the extent that the low numbers of carrion-breeding flies on many islands have been attributed to the presence of ''C. perlatus''. It has also been observed to use its claws to pinch the live flesh from the invasive land snail ''Achatina fulica''.

Eggs are brooded inside the shell that the female inhabits, but are released into the sea.

Evolution

''Coenobita perlatus'' was originally described in 1837 by Henri Milne-Edwards, based on material from Mauritius.

Uses

''C. perlatus'' is the rarest of the six species which are frequently found in the hobby aquarium trade.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassMalacostraca
OrderDecapoda
FamilyCoenobitidae
GenusCoenobita
SpeciesC. perlatus
Photographed in
Maldives