Hemigrapsus sanguineus


Hemigrapsus sanguineus, the Japanese shore crab or Asian shore crab, is a species of crab from East Asia. It has been introduced to several other shores, and is now an invasive species in North America and Europe.

Description

H. sanguineus has a squarish carapace, in width, with three teeth along the forward sides; its pereiopods are marked with alternating light and dark bands. The males have a bulb-like structure  at the base of the movable finger on their claws. Other distinguishing features include three spines on each side of the carapace. Adult crabs sizes range from 35–42 mm width. These crabs are opportunistic omnivores that tend to favor other animals over algae.  As crab density of the invaded area increases, so does the diet breadth, which suggests that competition alters selection of food. There currently is no mitigation against these crabs. A natural enemy of H. sanguineus is Sacculina polygenea, a parasite that attacks adult shore crabs and is specific to H. sanguineus.

Ecology and life cycle

H. sanguineus is an "opportunistic omnivore" that prefers to eat other animals, especially molluscs, when possible. It tolerates a wide range of salinities and temperatures.
Females produce up to 50,000 eggs at a time, and can produce 3–4 broods per year. The eggs hatch into zoea larvae, which develop through four further zoea stages, and one megalopa stage, over the course of 16–25 days. The eggs hatch typically late summer or fall, into larvae and the juvenile crabs molt in five stages to become megalopae, which typically takes about a month.  Once in this stage, the crabs settle and metamorphosize into full grown crabs. The larvae are planktonic, can be transported long distances during their development into the benthic adults.

Habitat

Typically, the crabs live in areas with large rocks, such as in between boulders of rocky shores. Hemigrapsus sanguineus inhabits many artificial structures such as on oyster reefs.  H. sanguineus can tolerate other habitats, such as salt marshes.

Ecological impacts

The invasion of the habitat by the H. sanguineus has been characterized by rapid geographical expansion and widespread displacement of competing crab species. Although this species has been introduced to such a large habitat, H. sanguineus is eaten by native crustacean eating fishes. Since the crabs are so abundant, some types of native fish even prefer the invading crab.  This may be due to the mouths of fish adapting to the size of H. sanguineus because they are the most abundant food sourceOn the other hand, native crabs also have adapted to eat H. sanguineus, possibly due to the availability of the food source or as an anti-predator strategy.  There is a possibility that H. sanguineus could expand and possibly overwhelm the habitat and out compete native crustaceans, such as the blue crab and lobster.

Diet

Because the crabs are opportunistic omnivores, these crabs will eat anything they can get their mouths around.  H. sanguineus prefers to consume animals, but during a period of starvation, these crabs tend to not have a food preference.  Most of the animals consumed by H. sanguineus are small invertebrates, such as mussels, snails, and amphipods.  The diet of these crabs is overall very broad.

Distribution

The native distribution of H. sanguineus is in coastal waters of the northwestern Pacific Ocean, ranging from Peter the Great Bay in southern Russia, to Hong Kong.

Introduced distribution

The first record outside its native range was from Townsends Inlet, Cape May County, New Jersey in 1988. The larvae are thought to be transported by ballast water of yachts and cargo ships coming from their native breadth. From the 1990s, it spread as an invasive species and became increasingly common, now ranging from eastern Maine to North Carolina.
In 1999, H. sanguineus was reported for the first time from European waters, having been discovered at Le Havre and the Oosterschelde estuary. It has since been found along a long stretch of the continental coast of the English Channel, from the Cotentin Peninsula to the Dover Strait. Its range has extended east and north along the North Sea coastline, including northwestern Germany and Western Jutland of Denmark. In the United Kingdom, it has been recorded from Guernsey and Jersey, and in Kent and south Wales. The species was first reported to be found in Sweden in 2012. In 2019, Swedish authorities reported that a private person collected more than 50 specimens of the crab in the vicinity of the island of Orust in the Skagerrak–Kattegat region. The specimens were very small, suggesting that the crab is now reproducing in Swedish waters. A couple of months later it was first reported from the Øresund, the narrow strait between the Danish Island of Zealand and the Swedish province of Scania. There is a single record of H. sanguineus in the Mediterranean Sea – a 2003 sighting in the northern Adriatic Sea – and a single specimen has been collected from the Romanian coast of the Black Sea, near Constanța in 2008.