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  • this program is about these guys.

  • Horseshoe crabs.

  • Now they are a very, very ancient body design on DDE.

  • What I wanna know is just how old man with the answers is Dr Ward.

  • Well, well, the first fossil records of horseshoe crabs like this are from the mid salary in about 450 million years.

  • Yeah, that's right.

  • He did just say 450 million years.

  • So have they changed much in that time?

  • Well, yes, there trains tremendously.

  • However, their external body features have not or quite recognisable today.

  • This is a fossilized, of course.

  • You crap.

  • Yes.

  • This is actually from the meds or the time of the dinosaurs.

  • Looking at this, it looks almost identical to the to the external aspect of the modern horseshoe crab.

  • The horseshoe crab is unquestionably one of nature's great survivors, and it's 450 million years of existence is withstood.

  • Several major extinction events have worked out great swathes of life.

  • Why did these managed to survive those five great extinction phases to g o?

  • You put your finger on one of the great side of the questions of all time.

  • Why did that happen?

  • Why does some of these creatures go extinct?

  • Another one survive and I don't have an easy answer.

  • But there are many hypotheses that have been suggested.

  • Certainly something major happened of the Earth.

  • So I want to meet this weird survivor to find out just how it's withstood.

  • Maybe half a 1,000,000,000 years, whether today it really is reaching the end of the line.

  • But I'm not going to the ends of the Earth, in fact, but I got to do is get out of New York City, but not far outside the city limits.

  • It feels like stepping back in time.

  • The horseshoe crab spends most of its life scuffling around in the mud at the bottom of the ocean.

  • So how am I gonna get my hands on one?

  • Well, in Delaware Bay, a quirk of evolutionary history meets a quirk of coastal geography.

  • Horseshoe crabs come ashore to spawn, and the largest number of them congregate.

  • Right here.

  • You'll see my Harry Kagle.

  • So the shoreline is the place to start looking.

  • I know it's a very local before it's covered in this sort of Hey, is now.

  • This is something I've been doing against.

  • It sells a nipper.

  • That's one of the one of the conchs, one of the conscious.

  • What's great about it is the rules of the same wherever you are in the world that we just happened to be in North America, and that's the Atlantic.

  • But the stuff that comes out is what we're interested in.

  • That's a mermaid's purse.

  • That's what we used to call them as kids.

  • On that left.

  • Is the egg case off a skate from a national point of view, if you scour this, you could learn an awful lot about what's going on out there.

  • And it seems I'm on the right track because there's plenty of evidence of ex horseshoe crabs.

  • If your crab broken.

  • If you lost the part, you better find one here.

  • I mean, you've got loads of it so that we got we got the the office over there of one.

  • Crab is like a wrecking yard for these animals.

  • There's bits of crab strewn as far as the eye can see, And it's just sad knowing that that there is the end, I guess 20 years of life over here now, this isn't just a crab graveyard.

  • They're they're everywhere they're signs of life here too.

  • You think our poor little thing that they are, they even got to adult hood.

  • Mister, Come.

  • But this is the Mt.

  • Skin off a horseshoe crab hopefully is still out there alive right now, growing up very mind here that horseshoe crabs aren't crabs a tool.

  • There are totally unrelated group of marine arthropods.

  • The Allied Thio gets the spiders and scorpions, all of the insects.

  • They all have their skeletons on the outside and XO skeleton made of a substance known as chitin.

  • Now you need to grow.

  • And if your skeletons on the outside that poses a bit of a problem.

  • So what they do is underneath their skin, they develop another skin on.

  • At some point, they crawl out there, splits their skin, their crawl out of it, expand a bit their skin or their new skin or harden informed brand new skeleton.

  • And this here is the old skin that has been left behind.

  • I've always been fascinated by this process because the details off the animal laurel there it's just a ghost of its former self.

  • So I could Krusty Cuteness ghost.

  • They have been crabs here, but if they only come ashore to spawn Hammer Gonna find a live one.

  • Like most living things, horseshoe crabs have a body clock, but theirs is incredibly well tuned to the rhythms of the sun, the moon and the tides.

  • They maximize their chances of meeting a mating by coming together on these Bt's on the highest of the spring tights.

  • Now these crabs might be underwater Rolexes.

  • But my timekeeping has never bean great with moons and tides and time differences that juggle.

  • The question is, Have I got my timing's right to be here When the invasion lands these animals, they perform one of the greatest natural spectacles for me anyway in the world.

  • How did they get their timing so precise?

  • That is that it's a good question.

  • There are a number of number.

  • It's interaction, the number of factors, the idea.

  • Because, as you mentioned, it's almost time of the kind of the shelf in the year.

  • And then they want to come up and congregate to mate.

  • There's no they're not congregating.

  • Normally eso In the high tides of spring and early summer, you get immense notes where an entire beach will be just covered with pears.

  • And the idea is that there's some photo period as the days get longer and it gets warmer that there's a many creatures since spring coming that way.

  • Many arthropods, in fact, they have very, very accurate photo sensors.

  • So it's really a combination of temperature photo period to get this immense number out there one time.

  • So it's back to Delaware Bay and turn to follow a bit of local knowledge on the evening of the spring.

  • New mood.

  • I've come to Pickering Beach with resin Ecologist Glenn Governor is my favorite beach for this because it never fails to impress.

  • As the tide peaks, it seems that we and the crabs have synchronized our lives perfectly, and we just stumbled upon a breathtaking invasion, one of nature's greatest and weirdest events.

  • Oh, good.

  • Look, Look, At least this is the heli sporting ritual of hundreds of thousands off weird creatures on the seas, bristling with if you look, it looks just like a lot of pebbles, but they're not every single one of these is it as far as the eye can see, and beyond the tide line is a crawling carpet of crabs.

  • Visitors from another time.

  • So really, just in the fringe off a big event that's occurring right here.

  • This is just their turn.

  • Just an orgy.

  • I mean, I'm not used to this.

  • Normally, this program involves me looking for something that's not a chance of sick, lumbering about for a whole hour, trying to find it as a show on, then usually failing or getting distant glimpse of it.

this program is about these guys.

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