

Red king crab. Credit: NOAA Fisheries
About the Species

Red king crab. Credit: NOAA Fisheries
U.S. wild-caught red king crab is a smart seafood choice because it is sustainably managed and responsibly harvested under U.S. regulations.

Population
The Pribilof Islands, Norton Sound, and Bristol Bay stocks are not overfished. The Western Aleutian Islands population level is unknown, but management measures are in place.

Fishing Rate
The Pribilof Islands and Bristol Bay stocks are closed to fishing. None of the stocks are subject to overfishing.

Habitat Impacts
Habitat impacts from crab pots are minor because fishing occurs in areas of soft sediment, such as silt and mud, which are unlikely to be damaged by fishing gear.

Bycatch
Regulations are in place to minimize bycatch.
Population Status
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There are four stocks of red king crab: Bristol Bay, Pribilof Islands, Norton Sound, and Western Aleutian Islands. According to the most recent stock assessments:
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The Bristol Bay stock is not overfished (2021 stock assessment) and not subject to overfishing based on 2020 catch data. Summary stock assessment information can be found on Stock SMART.
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The Pribilof Islands stock is not overfished (2019 stock assessment) and not subject to overfishing based on 2020 catch data. Summary stock assessment information can be found on Stock SMART.
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The Norton Sound stock is not overfished (2022 stock assessment) and not subject to overfishing based on 2020 catch data. Summary stock assessment information can be found on Stock SMART.
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The Western Aleutian Islands stock is not subject to overfishing based on 2020 catch data, but data are insufficient to determine population status at this time (2017 stock assessment). Summary stock assessment information can be found on Stock SMART.
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Appearance
- Red king crabs are the largest of the commercially harvested crabs.
- They range in color from brownish to bluish red and are covered in sharp spines.
- They have three pairs of walking legs and one pair of claws.
- Their claws are different shapes. One is a large, heavy-duty claw that is used for crushing prey, and the other smaller claw is used for more delicate handling of food items.
- Determining the sex of red king crabs is easy. Males have a triangular abdominal flap and females have a rounded one.
Biology
- Red king crabs can grow to be very large, up to 24 pounds with a leg span of 5 feet. Males grow faster and larger than females.
- Female red king crabs reproduce once a year and release between 50,000 and 500,000 eggs.
- Larvae hatch from eggs looking like tiny shrimp.
- The larvae feed on phytoplankton and zooplankton for 2 to 3 months before metamorphosing into tiny crabs and settling on the ocean bottom.
- Red king crabs can only grow by molting (shedding their old shell and growing a new one).
- After molting they are soft and vulnerable to predators until their new shell hardens.
- Red king crabs eat almost anything they can find and crush with their claws.
- Smaller crabs eat algae, small worms, small clams, and other small animals.
- Larger crabs eat a much wider range of items including worms, clams, mussels, barnacles, crabs, fish, sea stars, sand dollars, and brittle stars.
- Smaller crabs are eaten by a variety of groundfish, octopi, sea otters, and crabs, including other red king crabs.
- Large red king crabs have few predators except right after molting.
Where They Live
Range
- In North American waters, red king crabs are found in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands, along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska, and south to British Columbia, Canada.
Habitat
- Juveniles less than 2 years old live in shallow waters in complex habitats, such as shell hash, cobble, algae, and bryozoans (branching, coral-like invertebrates) to avoid being preyed upon by fish and other crabs.
- Older juveniles form pods that travel together, mounding up during the day and feeding at night.
- Pods can consist of tens of thousands of individual crabs and are likely an anti-predator strategy, similar to schooling in fish.
- Mature animals move into deeper water (typically less than 650 feet along the continental shelf) to feed, and the females return to shallow waters to hatch their eggs.
Fishery Management
- NOAA Fisheries, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council, and the Alaska Department of Fish and Game manage the red king crab fishery.
- Managed under the Fishery Management Plan for Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands King and Tanner Crabs, which defers management of crab fisheries to the State of Alaska with federal oversight. State regulations must comply with the fishery management plan, the national standards of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable federal laws:
- The red king crab fishery is currently managed according to the “three S’s”—size, sex, and season. Only male crabs of a certain size may be harvested, and fishing is not allowed during mating and molting periods. These measures help ensure that crabs are able to reproduce and replace the ones that are harvested. Fishermen must install escape panels and rings on their pots to prevent ghost fishing (when lost pots continue to capture and kill species) and to reduce bycatch.
- Every year, managers set the harvest limit for the next fishing season using the most recent estimates of crab abundance. Managers allocate shares of the harvest among harvesters, processors, and coastal communities through the crab rationalization program, which was implemented in 2005 to address economic, safety, and environmental issues in the fishery. This program includes a community development quota, which protects community interests by allowing community groups a percentage of the harvest. They’re given the opportunity to purchase shares in the fishery before the shares are offered for sale outside the community. Vessels carry vessel monitoring systems (satellite communications systems used to monitor fishing activities) and must report their landings electronically.
- Managers monitor catch in real time and are able to close the fishery when the harvest limit is reached.
- Observers are required on 20 percent of the vessels in the fishery. They collect data on catch and bycatch and document any violations of fishing regulations.
- Fishing has been closed for red king crab in the Pribilof Islands and Western Aleutian Islands for many years.
Harvest
- In 2021, commercial landings of all king crab in Alaska totaled 6 million pounds and were valued at more than $73 million, according to the NOAA Fisheries commercial fishing landings database.
- Red king crab are mainly harvested in Bristol Bay. Some catch also comes from fisheries in Norton Sound.
- Gear types, habitat impacts, and bycatch:
- Mesh-covered pots that are 7 to 8 square feet are used to catch red king crab.
- Only male crabs can legally be caught and sold.
- Crab pots can unintentionally catch female crabs (which may not be harvested), males under the comm ercial size, and non-targeted crab species as well as a small number of other species including octopus, Pacific cod, Pacific halibut, other flatfish, sponges, coral, and sea stars.
- Regulations require fishermen to install escape panels and rings on their pots to prevent ghost fishing (when lost pots continue to capture and kill species) and to reduce bycatch.
- Habitat impacts from the red king crab fishery are minor because fishing occurs in areas of soft sediment such as silt and mud. Soft sediments are unlikely to be damaged by fishing gear. Crab pots are less damaging than mobile gear because they are stationary and contact a much smaller area of the seafloor.
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Fishing has been closed for red king crab in the Pribilof Islands since 1999 to avoid bycatch of the overfished Pribilof Islands blue king crab. Fishing for the Bristol Bay stock was closed for the 2021/2022 and 2022/2023 fishing seasons because of a low abundance of mature females.
Scientific Classification
- In North American waters, red king crabs are found in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands, along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska, and south to British Columbia, Canada.
- Juveniles less than 2 years old live in shallow waters in complex habitats, such as shell hash, cobble, algae, and bryozoans (branching, coral-like invertebrates) to avoid being preyed upon by fish and other crabs.
- Older juveniles form pods that travel together, mounding up during the day and feeding at night.
- Pods can consist of tens of thousands of individual crabs and are likely an anti-predator strategy, similar to schooling in fish.
- Mature animals move into deeper water (typically less than 650 feet along the continental shelf) to feed, and the females return to shallow waters to hatch their eggs.
Fishery Management
- NOAA Fisheries, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council, and the Alaska Department of Fish and Game manage the red king crab fishery.
- Managed under the Fishery Management Plan for Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands King and Tanner Crabs, which defers management of crab fisheries to the State of Alaska with federal oversight. State regulations must comply with the fishery management plan, the national standards of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable federal laws:
- The red king crab fishery is currently managed according to the “three S’s”—size, sex, and season. Only male crabs of a certain size may be harvested, and fishing is not allowed during mating and molting periods. These measures help ensure that crabs are able to reproduce and replace the ones that are harvested. Fishermen must install escape panels and rings on their pots to prevent ghost fishing (when lost pots continue to capture and kill species) and to reduce bycatch.
- Every year, managers set the harvest limit for the next fishing season using the most recent estimates of crab abundance. Managers allocate shares of the harvest among harvesters, processors, and coastal communities through the crab rationalization program, which was implemented in 2005 to address economic, safety, and environmental issues in the fishery. This program includes a community development quota, which protects community interests by allowing community groups a percentage of the harvest. They’re given the opportunity to purchase shares in the fishery before the shares are offered for sale outside the community. Vessels carry vessel monitoring systems (satellite communications systems used to monitor fishing activities) and must report their landings electronically.
- Managers monitor catch in real time and are able to close the fishery when the harvest limit is reached.
- Observers are required on 20 percent of the vessels in the fishery. They collect data on catch and bycatch and document any violations of fishing regulations.
- Fishing has been closed for red king crab in the Pribilof Islands and Western Aleutian Islands for many years.
Harvest
- In 2021, commercial landings of all king crab in Alaska totaled 6 million pounds and were valued at more than $73 million, according to the NOAA Fisheries commercial fishing landings database.
- Red king crab are mainly harvested in Bristol Bay. Some catch also comes from fisheries in Norton Sound.
- Gear types, habitat impacts, and bycatch:
- Mesh-covered pots that are 7 to 8 square feet are used to catch red king crab.
- Only male crabs can legally be caught and sold.
- Crab pots can unintentionally catch female crabs (which may not be harvested), males under the comm ercial size, and non-targeted crab species as well as a small number of other species including octopus, Pacific cod, Pacific halibut, other flatfish, sponges, coral, and sea stars.
- Regulations require fishermen to install escape panels and rings on their pots to prevent ghost fishing (when lost pots continue to capture and kill species) and to reduce bycatch.
- Habitat impacts from the red king crab fishery are minor because fishing occurs in areas of soft sediment such as silt and mud. Soft sediments are unlikely to be damaged by fishing gear. Crab pots are less damaging than mobile gear because they are stationary and contact a much smaller area of the seafloor.
-
Fishing has been closed for red king crab in the Pribilof Islands since 1999 to avoid bycatch of the overfished Pribilof Islands blue king crab. Fishing for the Bristol Bay stock was closed for the 2021/2022 and 2022/2023 fishing seasons because of a low abundance of mature females.
Scientific Classification
Kingdom | Animalia | Phylum | Arthropoda | Class | Malacostraca | Order | Decapoda | Family | Lithodidae | Genus | Paralithodes | Species | camtschaticus |
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Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 12/29/2022
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Seafood Facts

Is Red King Crab Sustainable?
U.S. wild-caught red king crab is a smart seafood choice because it is sustainably managed and responsibly harvested under U.S. regulations.

Availability
Year-round, but generally harvested from October to January.

Source
U.S. wild-caught in Alaska.

Taste
Red king crab meat has a distinctive rich, sweet flavor and delicate texture.

Texture
Tender.

Color
White meat with pink accents.

Health Benefits
King crab is low in saturated fat and is a great source of protein, vitamin B12, phosphorus, zinc, copper, and selenium.
Nutrition Facts
Servings: 1; Serving Weight: 100 g (raw); Calories: 84; Protein: 18.29 g; Total Fat: 0.6 g; Total Saturated Fatty Acids: 0.090 g; Carbohydrate: 0 g; Total Sugars: 0 g; Total Dietary Fiber: 0 g; Cholesterol: 42 mg; Selenium: 36.4 mcg; Sodium: 836 mgMore Information
Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 12/29/2022
Seafood News



Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 12/29/2022
Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 12/29/2022
Science Overview

NOAA Fisheries conducts various research activities on the distribution and abundance of red king crab. The results of this research are used to inform management decisions for this species.
Red King Crab in Alaska
Our research in Alaska on the growth, reproduction, diet, distribution, and juvenile habitat of red king crab provides information crucial for understanding and managing this species.
Recent Science Blogs
Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 12/29/2022
Documents
Draft Eastern Bering Sea Crab Technical Memorandum
This is a draft Technical Memo that includes preliminary results from the 2022 eastern Bering Sea…
Profiles of Fishing Communities of Alaska
In-depth profiles of the 196 Alaska communities most involved in Alaskan and North Pacific…
Alaska Mariculture Workshop Summary Report
Summary of a multi-day aquaculture workshop with more than 60 mariculture development stakeholders…
The 2018 Eastern Bering Sea Continental Shelf and Northern Bering Sea Trawl Surveys: Results for Commercial Crab Species
The eastern Bering Sea bottom trawl survey has been conducted annually since 1975 by the Resource…
Data & Maps
2021 Alaska Fisheries Economic Status of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands King and Tanner Crab
This Fisheries Management Plan includes all species and fisheries for Alaska crab (red, blue, and…
2020 Alaska Crab Stock Assessment And Fishery Evaluation Report
This Fisheries Management Plan includes all species and fisheries for Alaska crab (red, blue, and…
2019 Alaska Fisheries Economic Status of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands King and Tanner Crab
This executive summary highlights three sets of primary indicators describing aggregate changes in…
Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 12/29/2022