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LHCOS supports Illinois legislation to ban painted hermit crab shells (Page 21)

news release

FOR RELEASE AT 7:00 P.M.

MARCH 1, 2023

LHCOS supports Illinois legislation to ban painted hermit crab shells

Painted shells are inhumane, unnecessary and destroy needed natural resource

WAYNE CITY, ILL., MARCH 1, 2023 — The Land Hermit Crab Owner’s Society supports Illinois House Bill HB3257 sponsored by Illinois House of Representative Robert Rita. Painted shells for hermit crabs are inhumane, unnecessary and destroy a much-needed natural resource. This type of animal abuse should be illegal, not just in Illinois but worldwide.

The process used to force hermit crabs from their natural shells into painted, decorative shells is cruel and inhumane. Painted hermit crab shells exist solely as a marketing gimmick employed by the pet trade to entice children and their parents into purchasing them. There currently are not enough shells left on our beaches for hermit crabs to use as shelter to protect their bodies.

Every year, millions of hermit crabs are taken from their humid, warm beach paradise and piled into plywood boxes, destined for boardwalks, beach resorts and pet stores across the United States. Once captured by the pet trade, hermit crabs are forced out of their natural shells using inhumane processes that injure the crab and destroy its natural shell. A hermit crab cannot survive without its shell — the shell protects its soft and delicate body, contains a careful mix of salt and freshwater to help it survive dry conditions, and regulates its body temperature. At processing centers, the hermit crabs’ shells are broken in a vise, bodies plucked from the shards and they’re thrown into a box containing more “marketable” painted shells. Hermit crabs are often forced into painted shells while the paint is still wet. The paint dries and traps the crab inside the shell, which leads to the crab not being able to change shells as it grows. Many hermit crabs do not survive this process and if they do, experience severe injuries and limb loss that significantly reduce its chances of surviving in captivity.

Painted shells attract small children and their parents who see the hermit crabs for sale while wandering along boardwalks and shops. Hermit crab shells are painted to match whatever is currently popular and appealing to children — Spongebob, a soccer ball, Batman — and are frequently advertised as “free” with the purchase of a care kit. Care must be taken when marketing living beings to children, which could inadvertently teach them to treat a living creature as if it were a plastic, disposable toy.

Hermit crabs depend upon properly fitting shells for protection from predators, mating success and reproduction. Hermit crabs, whose own bodies provide only thin, soft exoskeletons, must scavenge to find hard-walled shells abandoned by marine gastropods that they can wear for shelter.  The shells that hermit crabs seek are made by marine gastropods that secrete calcium carbonate, which forms a crystalline shell into a spiral shape with an opening to accommodate a hermit crab’s growing body. Scientists estimate that more than 30 percent of hermit crabs in the wild are wearing shells that are much too small or improperly fitting due to shell shortages along coastlines and beaches. The present lack of hermit crab housing is so severe that biologists now routinely find land hermit crabs attempting to shelter themselves in trash, glass jars and whatever other ill-fitting forms of refuse they may find along the beach. Human activity due to the pet trade and shell collecting is largely to blame for the current seashell shortage. Eliminating painted shells in the pet trade will reduce the number of seashells removed from beaches and will greatly improve wild hermit crabs’ chances of finding natural, well-fitting shells to use as shelter.

With proper care, hermit crabs can live more than 40 years but because of the pet trade abuse, many only survive a couple of years. The overwhelming misinformation about proper hermit crab care is responsible for the unnecessary death of millions of hermit crabs every year.

About the Land Hermit Crab Owners Society: LHCOS advocates to improve the lives of captive land hermit crabs and protect and preserve wild hermit crabs, their habitat and resources like shells. LHCOS is dedicated to the core values of: Conservation & Community, Advocacy, Research & Rescue and Education. More information about the Land Hermit Crab Owners Society is available at https://lhcos.org/.

###

Contact:     Stacy Griffith   —      +1 307-222-9323

Click to download news release as a PDF

https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/billstatus.asp?DocNum=3257&GAID=17&GA=103&DocTypeID=HB&LegID=148413&SessionID=112

Robert Rita

Representative Robert “Bob” Rita (D)
28th District
Assistant Majority Leader

Photograph of Representative  Robert "Bob" Rita (D)   Springfield Office:109 Capitol BuildingSpringfield, IL   62706(217) 558-1000District Office:2355 West York StreetSuite 1Blue Island, IL  60406(708) 396-2822(708) 396-2898 FAX

LHCOS supports Illinois legislation to ban painted hermit crab shells

Sticky
2023-03-01
By: lhcos
On: March 1, 2023
In: Blog, Say NO to painted shells, Society

news release

FOR RELEASE AT 9:00 A.M.

MARCH 1, 2023

LHCOS supports Illinois legislation to ban painted hermit crab shells

Painted shells are inhumane, unnecessary and destroy needed natural resource

WAYNE CITY, ILL., MARCH 1, 2023 — The Land Hermit Crab Owner’s Society supports Illinois House Bill HB3257 sponsored by Illinois House of Representative Robert Rita. Painted shells for hermit crabs are inhumane, unnecessary and destroy a much-needed natural resource. This type of animal abuse should be illegal, not just in Illinois but worldwide.Read More →

Hermit Crabs in Bags, Stacked for Shipment.

Changing the Future of the Hermit Crab Industry

2023-01-28
By: lhcos
On: January 28, 2023
In: Society

Millions of hermit crabs die each year on their way to your home. How is captive breeding changing the future of the hermit crab trade?Read More →

Approved Seller: BioactiveFX - Courtney Karr

BioActiveFX

2023-01-08
By: lhcos
On: January 8, 2023
In: Approved Seller Index, Approved Sellers

Read More →

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Start Here

If you are new to hermit crabs or unsure where to begin, start with these pages before applying care standards.

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Care & Education

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Resources

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  • Crab Street Journal

New to hermit crabs? Begin with Start Here before applying care standards.

Content on this site is informed by decades of hermit crab care research and education published through Crab Street Journal.

Crab Street Journal was created by the founders of Land Hermit Crab Owners Society as the organization’s official online magazine and hermit crab care library. It exists to document best practices, correct misinformation, and support ethical, science-based care for land hermit crabs.

Educational content published by LHCOS reflects the standards, research, and care philosophy developed and maintained through Crab Street Journal.

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