Asian shore crab
(Hemigrapsus
sanguineus)

The Asian shore crab, a native of the western Pacific Ocean from Russia to
Hong Kong and the Japanese archipelago, is also known as Japanese shore crab and
Pacific crab. Its known New York range includes the Hudson River and its lower
tributaries and Oyster Bay National Wildlife Refuge on the north shore of Long
Island. The crab’s means of introduction to the U.S. Atlantic coast is unknown,
but it is theorized that adults or larvae were introduced via ballast water
discharge from international shipping.
Identification:
This shore crab has a square-shaped shell
with 3 spines on each side of the carapace. Males have a fleshy,
bulb-like structure at the base of the moveable claw finger.
Carapace colors can be green, red, orangish brown or purple.
Claws have red spots; legs are light and dark banded. Adult
carapace width ranges from 1.4 inches to 1.7 inches. This
species is highly reproductive, breeding from May to September,
with females capable of producing three to four clutches per
season, each containing up to 50,000 eggs. Free-floating larvae
can be transported over long distances during the month that it
takes them to develop into juveniles and settle out of the water
column.

Impacts:
Owing to this crab being an opportunistic omnivore
(it feeds on macroalgae, salt marsh grass, larval and juvenile fish, and small
invertebrates), it could potentially negatively impact populations of such
native species as fish, shellfish and other crabs by predation and by general
food web effects. It could also out-compete native mud crabs, blue crabs and
lobsters.
IMAGE:
USGS, nas.er.usgs.gov