A number of lineages of crabs have evolved to live predominantly on land. Examples of terrestrial crabs are found in the families Gecarcinidae and Gecarcinucidae, as well as in selected genera from other families, such as Sesarma,[1] although the term "land crab" is often used to mean solely the family Gecarcinidae.[2]
Terrestriality and migration
No clear distinction is made between "terrestrial", "semiterrestrial", and "aquatic" crabs.[2] Rather, a continuum of terrestriality is displayed among the true crabs, although most land-adapted crabs must still return to water to release their eggs.[3] Some species of terrestrial crabs can be found many kilometres from the sea, but have to complete annual migrations to the sea.[3] For example, following the Indian Oceanmonsoon, the Christmas Island red crab (Gecarcoidea natalis) migrates en masse, forming a "living carpet" of crabs. The crabs can travel up to 1.46 km (0.91 mi) in a day, and up to 4 km (2.5 mi) in total.[4] Only a few land crabs, including certain Geosesarma species, have direct development (the mother carries the eggs until they have become tiny, fully developed crabs), and these do not need access to water to breed.[5][6] Many crabs belonging to the family Potamidae, which contains mostly freshwater crabs, have developed a semiterrestrial (for instance the genus Nanhaipotamon[7]) to terrestrial life history, and are sometimes independent of fresh water for reproduction (for instance the genus Tiwaripotamon[8]).
Coconut crab (Birgus latro), a terrestrial hermit crab that is the largest terrestrial invertebrate in the world
References
^Richard G. Hartnoll (1988). "Biology of the land crabs: an introduction". In Warren W. Burggren & Brian Robert McMahon (ed.). Evolution, systematics, and geographical distribution. Cambridge University Press. pp. 6–54. ISBN978-0-521-30690-4.
^ abcWarren W. Burggren & Brian Robert McMahon (1988). "Biology of the land crabs: an introduction". In Warren W. Burggren & Brian Robert McMahon (ed.). Biology of the Land Crabs. Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–5. ISBN978-0-521-30690-4.