Watch your fingers! New research finds that the hulking coconut crab has the strongest pinch of any animal.
In fact, this crustacean's claws can snap closed harder than most animals can bite — with the exception of alligators, according to the study published Nov. 23 in the journal PLOS ONE.
"During our field study, obtaining data for analysis was challenging, as the large claws of this crab pinched us on multiple occasions," Shin-ichiro Oka, the chief researcher of the zoological laboratory at the Okinawa Churashima Research Center in Japan, and his colleagues wrote in the journal article. [10 Amazing Things You Didn't Know About Animals]
Coconut crabs are found along islands in the Indian and Pacific oceans. The animals can weigh up to about 9 lbs. (4 kilograms) and are capable of cracking open coconuts with their impressive claws, Oka and his colleagues wrote.
Decapods — a group of crustaceans that includes crabs as well as lobsters and shrimp — can generate the greatest force per body mass with their claws of any group of animals, Oka and his colleagues wrote. But no one had ever tested the strength of the heavyweight coconut crab.
In the field, the researchers used a stainless-steel sensor to test the grips of the 29 captured crabs. Results showed that the maximum grips ranged from 29.4 newtons to 1,765.2 newtons. For comparison, the human bite can generate a force of up to 1,300 newtons at the molars, according to a 2010 study in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
On a body-mass basis, this force exceeds that produced by all animals other than alligators and their bites, the researchers concluded. Coconut crabs are solitary and aggressive, the scientists wrote, and often battle it out with each other and with potential predators and competitors. Because these animals aren't limited by shell size like their hermit crab cousins, coconut crabs have likely been freed to evolve particularly large bodies and claws, the researchers wrote.
Original article on Live Science.