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Seabird-eating 'monster' crabs are chatty during sex
Seabird-eating 'monster' crabs are chatty during sex
Seabird-eating 'monster' crabs are chatty during sex

Coconut crabs, Earth's biggest land crabs, are internet famous from images in which they dwarf trash bins and tear birds limb from limb.

But when these crabs aren't devouring seabirds, they're chatting to each other in vibrating clicks, and scientists recently discovered that the crabs' weird clicking calls are unexpectedly diverse.

In fact, their crabby chatter contains a range of signals that could represent complex levels of communication (for a crab, at least), according to a new study.

Related: Photos: Ancient crab is the strangest you've ever seen

Weighing up to 9 lbs. (4 kilograms) and with a leg span of more than 3 feet (1 meter), coconut crabs (Birgus latro) are gargantuan crustaceans and the largest terrestrial invertebrates in the world. These cousins of hermit crabs once inhabited islands across the Indo-Pacific area, but people harvested coconut crabs to extinction in many of their former habitats, scientists wrote in the study, published in the December issue of the journal Zoology.

Previously, the researchers found that the crabs produced "tapping-like sounds," but they were unsure how and why the animals made those noises. For the new study, the scientists captured X-ray movies of the clicking crabs to uncover the source of their acoustic prowess; they also recorded digital audio of the crabs during interactions between males and females, to see if the clicking was linked to mating behavior.

In experiments, male and female coconut crabs clicked before, during and after mating — and the sounds that they made were different at each stage. X-rays revealed that the crabs were communicating by vibrating thin appendages known as scaphognathites, which draw air into the crabs' lungs. When the structures vibrate, they flutter against hard plates in the crabs' gill channels to generate a tapping sound. By changing the structure's vibration speed, the crabs could produce multiple sounds that varied in frequency and intervals, according to the study.

The only other crustacean that produces sound with its scaphognathites is the aquatic crayfish (Procambarus clarkii), and coconut crabs are now the only land crustaceans known to exhibit this behavior, the researchers reported.

Trash can titans?

Long before coconut crabs caught scientists' attention with their clicking, they were renowned for their girth. More than a decade ago, the internet audience was transfixed (and terrified) by a much-circulated photo of a truly monstrous coconut crab that appeared to be the size of a trash can. However, the scale in the photo was misleading, and the crab — though large — was probably not quite as big as it looked, biologist Michael Bok wrote in January 2010 on his blog Arthropoda.

An outdoor trash can (such as the one in the crab photo) typically measures about 4.25 feet (1.3 m) tall, which led viewers to think that the crab was about that length. But the bin in the photo is likely much smaller than average, making the crab look bigger by comparison, Bok explained.

Coconut crab from r/WTF

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