Red Leg Hermit Crab
Algae Eater
Goes well with:
Red Leg Hermit Crabs are popular additions to saltwater aquarium clean up crews due to their small size, bright red coloration, and constant scavenging behavior. These active hermit crabs help consume nuisance algae, detritus, leftover foods, and organic debris from live rock, sand, and hard-to-reach crevices. Their small size allows them to clean areas that larger snails and crabs may not be able to reach, making them useful additions to reef aquariums, nano tanks, and peaceful community systems. Red Leg Hermit Crabs are generally peaceful, but like most hermit crabs, they should be provided with extra empty shells to reduce competition with snails and other hermits.
Introduction to Red Leg Hermit Crab
Red Leg Hermit Crabs (Clibanarius digueti) are small, hardy cleanup crew animals known for their red legs, active foraging behavior, and usefulness in controlling algae and detritus. Also commonly sold as Mexican Red Leg Hermit Crabs or Dwarf Red Tip Hermit Crabs, they are excellent beginner-friendly invertebrates for established saltwater aquariums. They spend much of their time moving across rockwork and sand, picking at algae, leftover food, and debris while helping keep the aquarium cleaner.
Care Requirements
Care Level: Easy – Hardy when kept in stable, established aquariums
Minimum Tank Size: 10+ gallons
Aquarium Setup: Requires live rock, sand, crevices, and extra empty shells
Red Leg Hermit Crabs do best in established aquariums with plenty of live rock and surface area for grazing. They are active scavengers and may dig lightly through the sand while searching for food, which can help stir small areas of the substrate. Extra empty shells should always be available in a variety of sizes so they can move into larger shells as they grow.
Diet & Nutrition
Red Leg Hermit Crabs are omnivorous scavengers that feed on algae, detritus, leftover foods, and organic debris.
Diet: Omnivorous – Eats algae, detritus, leftover food, and small meaty foods
Recommended Foods:
Naturally occurring algae on live rock and aquarium surfaces
Detritus and leftover fish food
Algae wafers
Dried seaweed
Small meaty foods such as mysis shrimp or finely chopped seafood
Although Red Leg Hermit Crabs will graze throughout the aquarium, they should not be expected to survive only on waste in overly clean systems. If natural algae and leftover food are limited, offer small supplemental feedings to keep them healthy.
Lifespan & Growth Rate
Lifespan: 1-3+ years with proper care
Growth Rate: Moderate – Can grow up to about 1 inch
Red Leg Hermit Crabs remain small, making them suitable for nano reefs and larger cleanup crew packs alike. Like other crustaceans, they molt as they grow and require stable water parameters to support healthy molting.
Temperament & Compatibility
Temperament: Peaceful to Semi-Peaceful – Generally safe, but opportunistic around snails and other small invertebrates
Reef Safe? Yes, with caution – Does not harm corals, but may climb on them or disturb loose frags while foraging
Red Leg Hermit Crabs are generally reef safe and suitable for peaceful saltwater aquariums. However, they may compete with snails for shells if empty shells are not provided. Avoid keeping them with predatory fish or invertebrates such as triggers, puffers, hawkfish, large wrasses, large crabs, or other animals that may eat small hermit crabs.
Common Challenges & Considerations
Needs Extra Shells: Provide multiple empty shells in different sizes to reduce aggression and prevent them from targeting snails for new shells.
Opportunistic Feeding: While useful scavengers, they may investigate weakened snails, leftover foods, or other available food sources.
Can Disturb Loose Frags: They may climb over coral plugs or loose frags while foraging.
May Compete With Snails: Hermit crabs and snails can be kept together, but shell availability helps reduce problems.
Sensitive to Copper: Like all marine invertebrates, they should never be exposed to copper-based medications.
Molting Sensitivity: Sudden changes in salinity, pH, or alkalinity can cause stress during molting.
To prevent issues, acclimate them carefully, provide extra empty shells, avoid copper exposure, and keep them with peaceful, reef-safe tankmates.
Water Conditions
Temperature: 72-78°F
dKH Alkalinity: 8-12
pH: 8.1-8.4
Specific Gravity: 1.023-1.025