Glossary | Horseshoe Crab Home | Education Home | Fisheries Home | DNR Home
Information about the Horseshoe Crab Fishery
 Life History
 Anatomy
 The Fishery
     About the Fishery
     Horseshoe
     Crab Fishery
     Whelk Fishery
     Eel Fishery
 Conservation
 Medical Uses
 Raising
 Horseshoe Crabs
 How You Can Help
 Fisheries Home
People have harvested horseshoe crabs for centuries. Prior to the European colonization of North America, native tribes used the telson as spear tips and used the shell as containers. These small and localized harvests had little impact on horseshoe crab populations.

Today several different groups take advantage of the economic benefits horseshoe crabs provide: watermen use horseshoe crabs as bait to harvest other commercial fisheries species; the biomedical industry bleeds the crabs to obtain a pharmaceutical product; and, birders visit spawning areas to view the mgrating shorebirds.

Each of these user groups (stakeholders) depends on the long-term stability of the region’s horseshoe crab population. And of these, the bait fisheries are the largest user of the horseshoe crab population.

Fisherman preparing crab traps.
Waterman showing
two types of whelk pots.

Additional references...

Place cursor over highlighted terms for definitions
or use the glossary located at the top of the page.
Updated July 29, 2005