Crab ID??

LMSquire

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Oct 16, 2023
Messages
154
Reaction score
151
Location
Santa Cruz
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Posting on this again bc I got a better pic and I think you can see the hair on the legs. Gorilla crab?

Bought 6 emeralds from respected site and have two in my tank that grew into these monsters knocking stuff over. Worried they’re gonna snag a fish.

They appear to be more black in color.


IMG_3375.jpeg

 

ISpeakForTheSeas

7500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
Nov 22, 2021
Messages
8,466
Reaction score
10,368
Location
United States
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I always struggle a bit with ID'ing from videos, but I'm pretty confident those are just emerald crabs with hairy legs (it happens from time to time - you can google a few; some are hairier than others; KP Aquatics has a decent pic of one with hairy legs).

With regards specifically to emerald crabs (I was replying to a comment asking if they were gorilla crabs because of the hairy legs) and gorilla crabs:
Technically no because the hairy legs alone don’t make it a gorilla crab. Colloquially, you could almost make that argument, but they have the wrong kind/shape of claws for it.

Technically, the term gorilla crab pretty well only applies to crabs from the taxonomic family Xanthidae (emerald crabs are from the same taxonomic subsection - Heterotremata - but a different superfamily and - thus by default - a different family, Mithracidae).

Colloquially, however, the term is applied to pretty much any hairy crab with scissor-shaped claws (emerald crabs have more spoon-shaped claws), and, in the hobby, the term is basically used to mean any crab (regardless of claw shape or if it’s hairy or not) that isn’t reef-safe/would be likely to attack other inhabitants of the tank.
 
OP
OP
LMSquire

LMSquire

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Oct 16, 2023
Messages
154
Reaction score
151
Location
Santa Cruz
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I always struggle a bit with ID'ing from videos, but I'm pretty confident those are just emerald crabs with hairy legs (it happens from time to time - you can google a few; some are hairier than others; KP Aquatics has a decent pic of one with hairy legs).

With regards specifically to emerald crabs (I was replying to a comment asking if they were gorilla crabs because of the hairy legs) and gorilla crabs:
Thanks for a great response!

So aside from being a bit aggressive with each other, and knocking a few things over (that I should have glued in tighter) you don’t see these guys as being a potential risk to my small fish? (Fire gobies, royal gramma, small leopard wrasse?)

They sure took care of my bubble algae- like spots I don’t even understand how they reached, and they are excellent CUC in general.
 

ISpeakForTheSeas

7500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
Nov 22, 2021
Messages
8,466
Reaction score
10,368
Location
United States
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Thanks for a great response!

So aside from being a bit aggressive with each other, and knocking a few things over (that I should have glued in tighter) you don’t see these guys as being a potential risk to my small fish? (Fire gobies, royal gramma, small leopard wrasse?)

They sure took care of my bubble algae- like spots I don’t even understand how they reached, and they are excellent CUC in general.
I'm definitely not an expert - and I know there are some very mixed opinions on the reef-safeness of large emerald crabs - but I'd personally assume that as long as it's well fed and doesn't find itself hungry with easy access to very small, sleeping, fish, it'd probably be fine.

I haven't looked too in depth into the interaction of emeralds with fish, but to my understanding no one has actually seen one actively hunt healthy fish (at least not with any meaningful level of success). I've heard that they basically either only get sleeping fish (which I find less likely) or moribund (i.e. dying) fish (which I find more likely), and that sort of opportunistic predation would make sense to me.

That's my understanding, but I have no hands-on experience for this to say for sure.
 
OP
OP
LMSquire

LMSquire

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Oct 16, 2023
Messages
154
Reaction score
151
Location
Santa Cruz
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I'm definitely not an expert - and I know there are some very mixed opinions on the reef-safeness of large emerald crabs - but I'd personally assume that as long as it's well fed and doesn't find itself hungry with easy access to very small, sleeping, fish, it'd probably be fine.

I haven't looked too in depth into the interaction of emeralds with fish, but to my understanding no one has actually seen one actively hunt healthy fish (at least not with any meaningful level of success). I've heard that they basically either only get sleeping fish (which I find less likely) or moribund (i.e. dying) fish (which I find more likely), and that sort of opportunistic predation would make sense to me.

That's my understanding, but I have no hands-on experience for this to say for sure.
Copy that…and that is part of my concern- the sleeping fish. One of these guys seems to have taken up residence in the cave where my 5 firefish sleep.

That said, they are pretty fast and I’m sure they’re aware that the bran is in there, so perhaps a Darwin type situation here lol.

Like I said, they were purchased as emerald crabs from a site many of us use that is very reliable in my experience. Unfortunately they weren’t able to separate females for me which I asked for, so I’m guessing the ones that remained small were the females and these big monsters are well fed and grown males.

Thanks for sharing your time and experience and I’ll keep you posted!
 

Reefkeepers Archive

2500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
May 30, 2023
Messages
3,160
Reaction score
2,921
Location
Falmouth
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Look up black mithrax crab, see if that matches. The first one looks more like an emerald but the second one looks like a black mithrax


@ISpeakForTheSeas it looks like one to me, what do you think?
 
Last edited:

EeyoreIsMySpiritAnimal

Just another girl who likes fish
View Badges
Joined
May 14, 2019
Messages
14,553
Reaction score
21,582
Location
Spring, Texas
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Copy that…and that is part of my concern- the sleeping fish. One of these guys seems to have taken up residence in the cave where my 5 firefish sleep.

That said, they are pretty fast and I’m sure they’re aware that the bran is in there, so perhaps a Darwin type situation here lol.

Like I said, they were purchased as emerald crabs from a site many of us use that is very reliable in my experience. Unfortunately they weren’t able to separate females for me which I asked for, so I’m guessing the ones that remained small were the females and these big monsters are well fed and grown males.

Thanks for sharing your time and experience and I’ll keep you posted!
If you can pull them out, its pretty easy to sex them
 

fishywishy

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Jun 26, 2022
Messages
1,018
Reaction score
905
Location
Nunya business
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Thats 100% an emerald crab, looks like a red one which are kind of a rare find. I have the exact same fish as you and mine never touch anyone, even if they wanted too the fish are way too fast and the crabs are too small.
 

TOP 10 Trending Threads

MY BIGGEST REEFING SETBACK WAS RELATED TO...

  • Fish injury/disease/loss.

    Votes: 32 23.2%
  • Coral injury/disease/loss.

    Votes: 29 21.0%
  • Invert injury/sickness/loss.

    Votes: 3 2.2%
  • Equipment malfunction/failure.

    Votes: 27 19.6%
  • Nuisance algae bloom.

    Votes: 45 32.6%
  • Pest infestation.

    Votes: 20 14.5%
  • Other (please explain).

    Votes: 18 13.0%
Back
Top