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“A Perfect Invader” Is Taking Over The Ocean – 185,000 Eggs At A Time
IFL Science ^ | February 03, 2025 | Rachael Funnell

Posted on 02/06/2025 7:14:10 PM PST by Red Badger

We've been accidentally giving them a free ride around the ocean. Now it's time to think with our appetites.

Image credit: JDScuba / Shutterstock.com

If you live on The Internet, you’ve likely heard about carcinization: a kind of convergent evolution that’s seen a surprisingly large number of living things evolve crab-like bodies. So, are crabs peak performance? Given the meteoric rise of a species currently invading the oceans, they just might be.

Enter: the European green crab, Carcinus maenas. They are a staple feature across parts of the Atlantic Ocean and Baltic Sea, but have since spread from their native home to invade large swathes of the planet. Some have labeled them "supervillains" for their capacity to spread, and in Canada, they're trying to solve the problem by turning them into biodegradable plastic.

European green crabs: a perfect invader

They have a few traits that make them, as conservation biologist Joe Roman put it to The New York Times, “a perfect invader”. They eat everything, they can tolerate all kinds of water temperatures and salinity, and a single crab can produce 185,000 eggs per brood.

Yes, green crabs have many tricks up their claws, but perhaps their ultimate survival superpower is their incredibly nomadic larvae. When that female unleashes her 185,000 eggs on the world, they hatch and release larvae that have the potential to drift for around two months. Alone, a small speck of crustacean can cover only so much ground – but factor in we humans and our ships, and that 60 days becomes a much bigger window of opportunity.

Crabs + ships = world domination

Modern-day cargo vessels pick up and discharge water every time they make port, swallowing up and churning out green crab larvae that Roman said can stretch into the tens of millions. There aren’t many other species that would survive so long under these conditions, but in this way, green crabs have been hitching a free ride and scuttling out into non-native environments to eat whatever happens to be around.

The effect of this invasive crab invasion is seen across all kinds of life, threatening plants, contributing to erosion, and worsening climate change by degrading habitats. They have few natural predators – other than otters, which have done a fine job of chomping away at green crab populations in California – but could we throw a new predator into the fray? How about… ourselves?

The invasivore diet

Roman first proffered the “invasivore diet” in a 2004 article – and as a solution to invasive species, it’s more relevant now than ever. At a time when the harmful practice of octopus farming is becoming a burgeoning industry that addresses the dietary preferences of only a wealthy few, wouldn’t we be better off if we instead turned our focus to finding delicious ways to enjoy the animal protein we have far too much of?

In many cases, “invasions” like the green crab are the result of human activity. We have introduced species to all sorts of environments they weren’t supposed to ever access – sometimes on purpose, like possums and the establishment of a fur trade in New Zealand; and other times by accident, like our hitchhiking green crabs.

These invasive species are only doing what they do best, but if the natural order is to be preserved, it falls to humans to undo the damage done by the introductions we facilitated. Massive projects have eradicated animals from places they ought not to be, like rats on South Georgia Island, but in some places, the solution could also address global food demand.

Crabs aren’t alone as a species of interest to the invasivore diet. The invasive European weed garlic mustard has become a peppery addition to salad dressings, and sushi chefs have turned their craft to incorporate the highly invasive lionfish that’s thought to have spread across the world due to people dumping aquarium pets in the ocean.

Roman’s website Eat The Invaders hopes to continue to inspire this culinarily creative fix to invasive species, with a memorable mantra to boot: “Fighting invasive species, one bite at a time.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Food; Outdoors; Pets/Animals
KEYWORDS: atlantic; baltic; canada; carcinusmaenas; crab; crablegs; dontbeshellfish; europeangreencrab; invasivespecies; spongebobsquarepants; thisisnotkosher
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Arthur Wildfire! March; Berosus; Bockscar; BraveMan; cardinal4; ...

21 posted on 02/06/2025 7:51:23 PM PST by SunkenCiv (When one has no more recourse to law, the only recourse is to lawlessness.)
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To: Red Badger
Recipes galore, at Greencrab.org. The green crab scampi looks pretty promising, but I'd probably try the bouillabaisse first.
22 posted on 02/06/2025 7:52:12 PM PST by Flatus I. Maximus
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Wait, are you talking about rats? or 'Rats?

The latter are definitely a non-native, invasive species. Unfortunately, they're illegal to harvest & eat, once they get past the larval stage after 9 months. I've heard they do make good pets though.

23 posted on 02/06/2025 8:19:03 PM PST by CardCarryingMember.VastRightWC (Unity? Of course! I pledge to respect your President as much as you respected mine the past 4 years.)
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To: Red Badger
Feed the crabs to the octopus! Chickens could eat them if you crush the shells enough. I am allergic to crab so cannot eat them or ze bugs proposed for food by our unelected globalist crime villain overlords!)

Their shells also make good fertilizer!

24 posted on 02/06/2025 9:03:46 PM PST by Pete from Shawnee Mission
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To: Red Badger

https://elkhornslough.org/blog/news-release-endangered-sea-otters-keep-invasive-green-crabs-in-check-at-elkhorn-slough/


25 posted on 02/06/2025 9:53:06 PM PST by sasquatch (Do NOT forget Ashli Babbit! c/o piytar)
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To: Red Badger

So we on the Texas Coast have been seeing land crabs for several years. Destructive things they are.


26 posted on 02/06/2025 10:13:26 PM PST by Smellin Salt (AT A POLITICAL )
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To: Smellin Salt

Apparently they are tasty and seals and sea lions love them!..............


27 posted on 02/06/2025 10:15:03 PM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger
Alone, a small speck of crustacean can cover only so much ground – but factor in we us humans and our ships, and that 60 days becomes a much bigger window of opportunity.

Written by an A.I.?

Regards,

28 posted on 02/07/2025 1:04:51 AM PST by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: Red Badger

Time to call in Russell Johnson!

Regards,

29 posted on 02/07/2025 1:11:29 AM PST by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: CardCarryingMember.VastRightWC
Wait, are you talking about rats? or 'Rats?

The latter are definitely a non-native, invasive species. Unfortunately, they're illegal to harvest & eat, once they get past the larval stage after 9 months. I've heard they do make good pets though.

Difficult to housebreak though. Bark collars are a necessity as well.

30 posted on 02/07/2025 4:28:09 AM PST by Colorado Doug (Now I know how the Indians felt to be sold out for a few beads and trinkets)
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To: alexander_busek

Professor can save us!...............


31 posted on 02/07/2025 4:51:36 AM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger

Well, at least it isn’t the Crabcat.

Fear the Crabcat!


32 posted on 02/07/2025 4:52:41 AM PST by voicereason (When a bartender can join Congress and become a millionaire...there’s a problem.)
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To: voicereason

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tsKqJay4ZRE&t=98s


33 posted on 02/07/2025 4:56:20 AM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: clee1

Yep - might make some seafood cheaper....


34 posted on 02/07/2025 5:04:27 AM PST by trebb (So many fools - so little time...)
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To: BarbM

Yikes.


35 posted on 02/07/2025 6:55:58 AM PST by Tommy Revolts
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To: Macho MAGA Man

You got that right.


36 posted on 02/07/2025 6:56:25 AM PST by Tommy Revolts
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To: Red Badger

Need more melted butter and lemon.


37 posted on 02/07/2025 7:30:32 AM PST by Captain Compassion (I'm just sayin')
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To: Smellin Salt

Blue land crabs are good eating. They are so good they are regulated in Florida to limit their catch to keep the species alive. In the Bahamas and Caribbean they are so popular they are nearly fished to extinction in places. Big suckers with a huge claw and body full of gorgeous white crab meat. If you see them in Texas by all means catch it and boil that bad boy. You can set out chicken wire traps just like water crabs for em that’s what we do on padre don’t let the rangers see they get pissy with land traps on the Nat.seashore.


38 posted on 02/08/2025 11:34:04 AM PST by GenXPolymath
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To: GenXPolymath

Good to know. I’ve wondered if they are edible. I have an RV on a canal in Sargent, Texas and these things showed up five or six years ago and started digging burrows behind my bulkhead. I set a game cam out and it took me a while, but I finally caught one of them on film. They would dig from my yard all the way down to below the waterline, or vice versa.


39 posted on 02/08/2025 2:15:19 PM PST by Smellin Salt (AT A POLITICAL )
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To: Smellin Salt

You could go to home depot get some chicken wire and bailing wire make a simple barrel trap and bait it with castaway chicken scraps the more off smelling the better set it up right by their burrow holes and boom crab dinner. They tend to be sizable suckers too.


40 posted on 02/09/2025 11:04:18 PM PST by GenXPolymath
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