Fisheries Conservation

Principal Investigator

Female Blue Crabs Risk Sperm Shortage in Bay

Female blue crab with orange egg "sponge"
A female blue crab can produce sponges like this three times a year, each with millions of eggs.

If you want to save a fishery, protect the females. That’s been the operating logic for decades among fishery managers, and with good reason: Females carry the next generation. Throw one mature female back, and she could produce thousands or millions more offspring. But for female blue crabs, the story isn’t always so simple.

In a study published Oct. 24, scientists from the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC) confirmed that a potential snag is in fact happening in Chesapeake Bay. Without enough male blue crabs to go around, some females aren’t getting enough sperm to reach their full reproductive potential. If they survive past their first year of spawning, they risk running dry.

Read the full article on the SERC Shorelines blog

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