How Do Coconut Crabs Work? - podcast episode cover

How Do Coconut Crabs Work?

May 05, 20227 min
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Episode description

The coconut crab is the world's largest land-dwelling arthropod -- they grow longer than your average dog and can open coconuts with their claws. Learn more in this episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://animals.howstuffworks.com/marine-life/coconut-crabs.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, Lauren Boga bom Here. If you or a friend had a hermit crab when you were a kid, or if you have one now, you're familiar with how they'll make a home in a snail shell in the wild or a terrarium. They'll squeeze into an empty shell that's just the right size for them to carry around as mobile protection. They're soft bellies, sheltered and their legs

free for crawling. Most of the ones we keep as pets in the US are just an inch or too long, up to about five centimeters. Okay, now picture that little buddy, but twenty to thirty times larger and having grown just enough offenses that they no longer need to carry a defensive shell. And that's what you're looking at when you consider the coconut crab, a close cousin to the pet hermit crabs that we keep. The coconut crab is native to the islands in the Pacific and Indian Oceans, and

they're the world's biggest land dwelling arthropods. They can weigh up to nine pounds that's about four kilos with a leg span of around three ft or one meter. This is only about the third of the leg span of the Japanese spider crab, which is the biggest arthur pod period, but as it's an ocean dweller, it has less of a chance to startle us with its sheer size. Most coconut crabs are longer than most dogs, and coconut crabs have been known to eat kittens, rats, chickens, and each other.

They've even been proposed as a possible culprit in the disappearance of the body of Amelia Earhart, as we've discussed before on the show. For the article this episode is based on How Stuff Works, spoke with Shinichio Oka, chief research scientist at the Okinawa Choshima Research Center in Japan. He said, the coconut crabs have no seashell as protection from enemies, so they have powerful claws and a large

body to protect themselves. In addition, they're mighty claws. Let the monopoly is the terrestrial hard foods, including coconuts, which other animals are unable to get into. So exactly how strong are the claws of a coconut crab? OCAs said, we could find that coconut crabs can generate the pinching force of ninety times of their body weight. The calculated pinching force of the largest coconut crab is almost equal

to the bite force of the adult lions. So these overgrown coconuts smashing kitten eating crustaceans are nightmare versions of the petite and mildly pinchet hermit crabs that we know. But they actually do spend some of their life cycle in the same manner as their dainty your cousins. Coconut crabs spend most of their lives on land, but they

start out in the sea. A female coconut crab deposits larva, which she's been carrying around in her abdomen since they were just fertilized eggs, into the ocean, and the babies float around in the currents for a month or so eating other plankton, before gay enough body weight that they dropped the sea floor and find nice cozy snail shells

to move into. Just like your childhood hermit crab friend, the young coconut crabs move in and out of shells as they bulk up and get used to living on land, and sometimes a juvenile coconut crab will use a coconut husk or empty seashell is armor until its own shell gets harder. After about a year, the teens of the species eventually find that there are no shells left on the beach large enough to accommodate their bulk, and so they move out altogether. From here on out, they live

the rest of their lives out of the water. Adult coconut crabs can't swim and will drown if totally submerged. Adult coconut crabs bodies have kelcium based exo skeletons, which hard enough more than hermit crabs do once they mature, so they're free to grow as monstrous size as they can manage. Every few months, coconut crabs molt their too tight exo skeletons and then grow a larger one they

the old one after they've shed it. Coconut crabs will eat almost anything, all kinds of fruit, plant matter, dead animals they find lying around, food you've left lying around other crab species, or even their own friends. Actually, coconut crabs don't really have friends. They're pretty solitary. They have an excellent sense of smell, which makes them great at

finding rotting carcasses and anything else potentially edible. Coconut crabs are also sometimes called robber crabs because they've been known to steal items like silverware that has even the faint odor of food about it. But their most important source of nutrients is coconuts. Because coconuts seem to be what allows them to achieve the gigantism they're known for. Coconut crabs will climb trees to get at coconuts and use

their pinchers to open them. Study found that the coconut crabs that have access to coconuts are likely to have around double the mass of those living in coconut free environments. So a coconut crab is lucky enough to have coconuts around, and if it's strong enough to pan opener its way into a coconut, it's able to grow a lot bigger and then access even more coconuts the size ceiling gets

a whole lot higher. But coconut crabs are not invulnerable, their numbers seem to be declining, probably because the islands that they live on aren't what they used to be. Introduced species like dogs, pigs, and humans eat the adults, and invasive rats gobble up the smaller, more vulnerable babies. They're extremely slow growing and can live to be about

fifty years old. Coconut crabs have been listed as data deficient by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, meaning nobody really knows enough about these animals to understand their conservation needs. Although it's likely that they're not doing well, their status was last assessed in so more research is needed to understand where coconut crabs stand m Today's episode is based on the article called the coconut Crab, a crustacean on steroids on house toff works dot com, written

by Jesselyn Shields. Brain Stuff is production of I Heart Radio in partnership with how Stuffwork dot Com, and it's produced by Tyler Clang. Four more podcasts my heart Radio visit the i heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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