Crabs 'poo from their chests', museum says

Stuart Maisner
BBC News, South East@smaisner
Joe & Charlotte A member of staff at Crab Museum in Margate wearing a crab hat explaining details about crabs from a bookJoe & Charlotte
Crab Museum opened in Margate in 2021

An unusual museum in a Kent seaside town which aims to engage the public in the natural world has plans for expansion.

Crab Museum in Margate claims to be Europe's first and only exhibition space dedicated to the world of the decapod highlighting the "weirdness" of crabs.

Director Ned Suesat-Williams said: "Visitors get to find out where crabs poo from - it's their chest."

The free-to-visit attraction is set to expand for 2025 with plans for a roof garden which will provide habitats for insects and other pollinators.

"We use these often-underestimated animals to ask big questions about life on Earth," Mr Suesat-Williams said.

"Can crabs give us clues about what it means to be alive? Can they teach us how to live ethically?

"Can they explain our past and help predict our future?

"Crab Museum's use of humour and offbeat ways of looking at the world aim to make visitors question what museums should really be."

Sam Bush A model of a giant orange crab with red spots towering above miniature figures of people at Crab Museum in Margate Sam Bush
Crab Museum in Margate claims to be Europe's first and only exhibition space dedicated to the world of the decapod

He added: "Laughter is one of the greatest tools we have at our disposal when it comes to inspiring potential science enjoyers.

"Visitors get to find out where crabs poo from - it's their chest."

The museum features a timeline of life on Earth, as well as exhibits on evolution, anatomy and biodiversity.

The attraction opened three and a half years ago "to raise awareness of the diversity, importance and radical weirdness" of crabs, Mr Suesat-William said.

Crab Museum in Margate Old Town opens for the season on 14 February.

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