The flat fish that hide under the ocean dirt, are the ones to most likely eat crabs in the ocean. Mostly, the camoflauged fish eat crabs in the ocean. Segulls are also most commenly to eat this to. Seagulls eat crabs that live on the shore or, wah up on the shore.
Actually, you can't make your crabs have babies in captivity, they can only reproduce in the wild because they lay their eggs in the ocean.
Hermit Crabs live on the bottom of the ocean and eat the grasses that grow on the bottom.
The flat fish that hide under the ocean dirt, are the ones to most likely eat crabs in the ocean. Mostly, the camoflauged fish eat crabs in the ocean. Segulls are also most commenly to eat this to. Seagulls eat crabs that live on the shore or, wah up on the shore.
The scalps of Cowboy Ocean shell crabs who try to invade their territory.
More likely the opposite, the crab will eat/kill your dragon fish. Plus fiddler crabs do not often reproduce in captivity.
Most crabs eat detritus and carrion in the wild. In captivity, feed them regular fish food, supplemented with calcium and other minerals, as well as vegetables.
Most crabs eat detritus and carrion in the wild. In captivity, feed them regular fish food, supplemented with calcium and other minerals, as well as vegetables.
Though it is impossible in captivity, wild land hermit crabs have babies. The female lays eggs in the ocean that hatch into small zoea that live in the tide for several weeks until they emerge on shore and find their first shell.
Yes, land hermit crabs do mate. If you mean in captivity...yes and no. They will mate and sometimes you will even get fertilized eggs, but you can not raise them to be surviving baby hermit crabs in captivity unless you can duplicate the ocean.
hermit crabs mate in waters so if they are in captivity no in the wild yes hermit crabs mate in waters so if they are in captivity no in the wild yes
Lobsters and Crabs, octopus, Sea Anemones, and sea spiders eat snails in the ocean. A variety of fish also eat snails in the ocean.