Atergatis roseus explained

Atergatis roseus, the pancake crab, is a species of reef crab from the family Xanthidae with a natural range extending from the Red Sea to Fiji. It has colonised the eastern Mediterranean by Lessepsian migration through the Suez Canal. The flesh of this crab, like many other species in the family Xanthidae, is toxic.

Description

Atergatis roseus has a wide, smooth, oval carapace with convex almost entire, with no indication of regions and with bluntly crested anterolateral margins. The pereiopods are laterally compressed with distal crests on the upper and lower margins. The carapace is reddish brown and the legs have black tips, younger specimens are paler, more reddish orange, with a white margins to the carapace. They grow to 6 cm, measuring the carapace length from the head to the posterior.[1] [2]

Distribution

Atergatis roseus has wide Indo-Pacific distribution being found from the Red Sea and eastern Africa, south to KwaZulu-Natal east along the coasts of the Indian Ocean into the Pacific as far as Fiji.[2] In the eastern Mediterranean, A. roseus was first recorded from Israel in 1961,then from Lebanon and the southern coasts of Turkey and Syria.[3] It reached the Aegean Sea in 2005 [4] and had got as far as Rhodes by 2009.[3]

Biology

Atergatis roseus inhabits coral reefs and rocky substrata, from the low tide mark to a depth of 30 metres.[1] It prefers shallow reef rich areas with an abundance of places to hide. It is mainly nocturnal, as well as slow moving, and so it prefers to be near the security of a hiding place to which it can retreat when threatened.[5] It is omnivorous but a large part of its diet is made up of plant material, although specimens have been recorded feeding on fish.[6]

Toxicity

The meat of Atergatis roseus, like that of many other crabs from the family Xanthidae is toxic. The toxins are synthesised by bacteria of the genus Vibrio which live in symbiosis with the crab and the poisons are one similar to those found in puffer fish, i.e. tetrodotoxin, and also paralytic shellfish poison.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Atergatis roseus . 22 January 2017 . National Institute of Oceanography. Brachyuran Crabs of the West Coast, India.
  2. Web site: Atergatis roseus . 22 January 2017 . CIESM. CIESM Atlas of Exotic Species in the Mediterranean Vol. 2 – Crustaceans decapods and stomatopods . B. Galil . C. Froglia . P. Noël . 2002.
  3. Maria Corsini-Foka . Maria-Antonietta Pancucci-Papadopoulou . 2010 . The alien brachyuran Atergatis roseus (Decapoda: Xanthidae) in Rhodes Island (Greece) . Marine Biodiversity Records . 3 . 10.1017/s1755267210000667.
  4. 3 . M. Baki Yokes . S. Ünsal Karhan . Erdogan Okus . Ahsen Yüksek . Asli Aslan-Yilmaz . I. Noyan Yilmaz . Nazli Demirel . Volkan Demir . Bella S. Galil . 2007 . Alien Crustacean Decapods from the Aegean Coast of Turkey . Aquatic Invasions . 2 . 3 . 162–168 . 10.3391/ai.2007.2.3.2. free .
  5. Web site: CRINCH! The Crab of the Day! . 22 January 2017 . Glyos Connection.
  6. Web site: Xanthid crabs . 22 January 2017 . wildfactsheets.
  7. 3 . Tamao Noguchi . Joong-Kyun Jeung . Osamu Arakawa . Haruo Sugita . Yoshiaki Deguchi . Yasuo Shida . Kanehisa Hashimoto . 1985 . Occurrence of Tetrodotoxin and Anhydrotetrodotoxin in Vibrio sp. Isolated from the Intestines of a Xanthid Crab, Atergatis floridus . Journal of Biochemistry . 99 . 1 . 311–314 . 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a135476.