2008 Horseshoe Crab Census Information

The American horseshoe crab, Limulus polyphemus, occupies a critical niche in both the ecology of the Delaware Bay and in human pharmacology. Each spring as the crab comes ashore to spawn, its eggs provide food for hundreds of thousands of shorebirds flying north from South America to breeding grounds in the Arctic. In human medicine, the crab is bled, with no apparent harmful effects, to procure a compound that is used by the pharmaceutical industry to test intravenous drugs for dangerous bacteria. Yet despite the horseshoe crab's importance, no one knew much about its population status until recently.

In 1990, Delaware Sea Grant organized the first census of breeding horseshoe crabs in Delaware Bay. Now, every spring on several peak spawning days, volunteers donate their time to count crabs on key beaches in Delaware and New Jersey.

Requirements: Volunteers under age 18 must be accompanied by an adult. Participation in a training workshop is required to distinguish between male and female horseshoe crabs and to learn proper data recording procedures.

Time Commitment: The crab census is conducted in May and June.

To learn more about horseshoe crabs, visit the Delaware Sea Grant horseshoe crab site >

2008 Survey Dates

2008 Survey Beaches and Contacts

2008 Spawning Survey Training Information:

DE Nature Society/Abbotts Mill - Elliott Workman or Bill Rafter
Delaware National Estuarine Research Reserve - Kimberly Cole and Susan Love
The Nature Conservancy - John Graham

The following documents are in PDF format and require Adobe Acrobat Reader   

2008 Registration Form

Surveying Spawning Instructions

Survey Beaches and Tide Time Adjustments

Beach Site Sheet

Tally Sheet and Tag Report

Random Number Table

Two Person Census Procedure

Annual Spawning Survey Reports (PDF format)



We would like to thank the following organizations for their help during the horseshoe crab census:

US Fish and Wildlife Services
US Geological Survey
New Jersey Fish and Game

Limuli Laboratories
Maryland Department of Natural Resources

Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control
(Division of Fish and Wildlife)


For more information, please contact:

William Hall
Marine Education Specialist
University of Delaware
Sea Grant Marine Advisory Service
700 Pilottown Road
Lewes, DE 19958-1298
Phone: (302) 645-4253
Fax: (302) 645-4213