Cape Times

UCT graduate discovers a new hermit crab species

- Iman Omar

IN A chance discovery, a new species of deep-water hermit crab – the “green-eyed hermit crab” – has been discovered.

The creature is unique to South Africa’s West Coast.

UCT alumnus Lara Atkinson made the discovery while she was conducting a survey for the Department of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries three years ago, a UCT PhD candidate and researcher of this species, Jannes Landschoff, said.

While Atkinson was investigat­ing hake fish, she stumbled on the species.

Curious about the little crab, she sent it in for identifica­tion, and was surprised to find that she had discovered a new species.

It is unique for its “living shell” – soft, polypy masses that are amalgams of sand and material created by colonies of sea anemones that live on their backs.

Instead of a normal sea-like shell that most deep-water hermit crabs have, the green-eyed hermit crab has a pseudo-shell as it consists of the symbiotic relationsh­ip it has with anemones. Sea anemones anchor themselves on the backs of these hermit crabs for shelter and simultaneo­usly grow as the crab grows.

In addition to their green eyes, other unique features include biserial gills and extreme sexual dimorphism. This means the male species grow a much larger right claw compared to females.

The crab measures around 70mm, and has been named after Atkinson, Paragiopa-gurus atkinsonae.

There is no indication why this species is restricted to this very small area of the West Coast, where Landschoff said there are between 2 000 and 3 000 of these crabs.

Landschoff and Rafael Lemaitre of the National Museum of Natural History at the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n in the US described the new species in the journal ZooKeys.

 ?? Picture: KERRY SINK ?? NEWBIE: The green-eyed hermit crab.
Picture: KERRY SINK NEWBIE: The green-eyed hermit crab.

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