Acorn barnacle

Acorn Barnacles

Acorn Barnacles ©Paul Naylor

Acorn barnacle

Scientific name: Semibalanus balanoides
Barnacles are so common on our rocky shores that you've probably never really noticed them. They're the little grey bumps covering the rocks that hurt your feet when you're rockpooling. They're actually tiny little crustaceans and are related to crabs and lobsters!

Species information

Statistics

Length of shell: 2cm Average lifespan: up to 18 months

Conservation status

Common

When to see

January to December

About

The most common barnacle found on our shores, the acorn barnacle lives attached to any hard substrate, including rocks, pier legs, old boats and even other animals! Their body is contained within the shell you see on the rocks, positioned upside down with their legs at the top. When the tide comes in, they open the plates of the shell and stick their legs out, using them to catch plankton and other detritus out of the water.

How to identify

One of several very similar species of barnacle, which can be hard to tell apart. The acorn barnacle is generally grey-white in colour, with a kite-shaped opening and 6 shell plates.

Distribution

Found on all UK coasts.

Did you know?

Although the acorn barnacle is a hermaphrodite and has both male and female reproductive organs, individual barnacles function as either a male or a female. During the breeding season, males extend their notoriously long penises out of their shells and seek out a nearby female. After fertilisation, the larvae develop within the barnacle's body and are released into the water to feed on plankton and undergo moults until they are at the right stage to 'settle down'!
A coastal landscape, with the sea gently lapping at smooth rocks as the sun sets behind scattered clouds

Mark Hamblin/2020VISION

As a charity we rely on memberships

Memberships help us campaign for better protection and management of our seas.

Join today

Get marine updates straight to your inbox

Receive our monthly newsletter packed with marine conservation news from around the world!

Sign up
Sea

Mark Hamblin/2020VISION

Seas in crisis

Plastic-strewn beaches, fisheries on the verge of collapse and the ever growing effects of global climate change.

What The Wildlife Trusts are doing