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Cancer pagurus

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Edible crab
Scientific classification
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C. pagurus
Binomial name
Cancer pagurus
Linnaeus, 1758

The edible crab [1], Cancer pagurus, is a species of crab found in the North Sea, North Atlantic and the Mediterranean Sea. It is a robust crab of a reddish-brown colour, having an oval carapace with a characteristic "pie crust" edge and black tips to the claws [2]. Mature adults may have a carapace width of up to about 25 cm and weigh up to 3 kg. Natural lifespan is about 20 years but few individuals will reach this age because of heavy commercial exploitation.

The edible crab is abundant throughout the northeast Atlantic as far as Norway in the north and northern Africa in the south, on mixed coarse grounds, mud and sand from shallow sublittoral to about 100 m. It is frequently found inhabiting cracks and holes in rocks but occasionally also in open areas. Smaller specimens may be found under rocks in the littoral zone [3].

Edible crabs are nocturnal, hiding buried in the substrate during the day, but foraging up to 50 m from their hide-outs in the daytime [4]. It normally eats benthic animals such as other crustaceans and molluscs; with its powerful claws it is able to shatter carapaces and shells. The natural predators of adult C. pagurus are fish and cephalopods, whereas the larvae are eaten by various plankton eaters and juveniles (in the tidal zone) by seabirds.

The mouthparts and chelae of an edible crab

Due to its size, Cancer pagurus is slower than other crabs and has powerful claws to compensate. It may also bury itself under the sand to escape predators. When seized, C. pagurus adopts a characteristic position with the pereiopods and the chelipeds under the carapace to protect the more vulnerable ventral side. Because of this behaviour, this crab is called dormeur (French for "sleeper") in France.

Males are extremely aggressive amongst themselves, and even kill each other occasionally. Males recognise other males by the size of the claws, females' claws being smaller.

The carapace of C. pagurus is a reddish-brown color, although it is purple-brown in young specimens, and occasionally with white patches, and marked along the frontal-lateral margins with ten rounded lobes. Typically, a male has a carapace 90 mm long and 150 mm wide, although they may reach up to 250 mm wide in exceptional cases. A fold of the carapace extends ventrally to constitute a branchial chamber where the gills lie.

The first pereiopod is modified into a strong cheliped. The claw's fingers, the dactylus and propodus, are black. The other pereiopods are covered with rows of short stiff setae and the dactylus is black at the tip, and ends in a sharp tip. From a frontal view is possible to distinguish the antennae and antennules. Beside these there are the orbits in which the eyes are situated. The mouthparts comprise the third maxillipeds, behind which there is are two further pairs of maxillipeds, a pair of maxillae, a pair of maxillules, and finally the mandibles.

File:Addomiaperti.jpg
Male (♂):A- pleopods modified for reproduction; B- anus. Female (♀):a- gonopores; b- pleopods; c- anus.
File:MaschioFemmina.jpg
Morphological difference of the abdomen in the two sexes: narrow for males, wider in females

A ventral view shows the abdomen reduced and folded under the carapace. The abdomen has a different shape for male and female: in males it is comparatively narrow, whereas in the female it is wider. Hidden beneath the abdomen are the sexual organs and the anus. Reproduction takes place mostly in winter [3]; the male captures the female and holds her under himself until she moults. Internal fertilisation takes place before the hardening of the new carapace, with the aid of two abdominal appendages (gonopods). The fertilised eggs, numbering up to 20,000, are held under the female's abdomen until they hatch. The first developmental stage after hatching is a plantonic larva (1 mm) called the zoea that develops into a postlarva, megalopa, and finally an juveline. The first juvenile stage is characterised by a well developed abdomen, which will, in time, become reduced in size and folded under the sternum.

Edible crabs are heavily exploited commercially throughout their range. It is illegal to catch crabs of too small a size around the coast of Britain, a conservation measure brought in the 1870s. Crabs with a shell diameter of less than 100 mm should not be taken. In August 2006, an edible crab with three claws was found off the coast of Cornwall [5].

References

  1. ^ The edible crab is also sometimes referred to as the Cromer crab, because it is commonly caught around the Norfolk coastal town of Cromer. In the Channel Islands languages of Dgèrnésiais and Jerriais, it is called a chancre.
  2. ^ Neal, K.J. & E. Wilson (2005). "Edible crab, Cancer pagurus". Marine Life Information Network.
  3. ^ a b "Edible crab (Cancer pagurus)". ARKive.org.
  4. ^ Template:Cite journal2
  5. ^ "Three-clawed 'mutant' crab caught". BBC News. 2006-08-02. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)