An<fre.u)*, C. n/. /9/o .INVERTEBRATE. [From the PROCEEDINGS THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. [Publislied April 1910.] v. Crustacea.

Similar documents
Treasured Turtles GO ON

Australian Hermit Crab Care Manual

Activities are for use as intended at home, in the classroom, and story-times. Copyright 2007 by Sylvan Dell Publishing.

Welcome to Darwin Day!

Learn About Raccoons by Created by Lit Mama Homeschool

Madagascar, which entirely agree with one another. Rumph. specimens of. (1. c. pl. III, fig. 4). This species may be distinguished

Loggerhead Turtles: Creature Feature

just about anything they find: insects, snails, slugs, grubs, cockroaches, ticks, garbage, mice, carrion, pet food left out, fruits, grains, even

SEPTEMBER 18, 1942 VoL. XX, PP PROCEEDINGS NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB TWO INTERESTING NEW SNAKES

Your Hermit Crab is a climber by nature. It is very important to provide your crab with climbing material in order to keep him healthy and fit.

Education. ESL-Advance

Striped Skunk Updated: April 8, 2018

Different animals move in different ways. Cut and sort the animals into the correct groups. Walk Fly Swim Slide

Raptors: Birds of Prey Lapbook

Record snake: 17-foot python Pregnant with 87 eggs Caught in Everglades

Opossum. Didelphis virginiana

FACT FUN! *Loggerheads are the most common species of sea turtle in the ocean off of South Carolina.

Vol. XIV, No. 1, March, The Larva and Pupa of Brontispa namorikia Maulik (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Hispinae) By S.

Bones and Bellies Clue Card 1

Forest and Timber Insects in New Zealand No. 44. Large Cicadas. Amphipsalta cingulata (Fabricius) Amphipsalta strepitans (Kirkaldy)

Be Bear Aware. Getting Along with Bears: Some Tips for Kids

Grey Fox. Urocyon cinereoargenteus

I A KEEPING A FRESHWATER AQUARIUM LEVEL 1 (9- to 11-year-olds) ( Things to Learn Things to Do 7 i 1. How to set up and properly 1. Set up a freshwater

The Theory of Evolution

Charles Darwin. The Theory of Evolution

NEGLECTUS. NOTE V. Synonymical Remarks. about Palaemon neglectus nov. nom. and. Palaemon reunionnensis Hoffm. Dr. J.G. de Man. Plate

Newsletter May Crested Geckos and our guide to decorating your vivarium.

Science10 (AdaptationsMulberry4th)

Insects and freshwater fish on Tiritiri Matangi

Your web browser (Safari 7) is out of date. For more security, comfort and the best experience on this site: Update your browser Ignore

inauonai Liorary OT scotiana

Diatoms are producers. They are found very near the surface of the sea.

Name period date assigned date due date returned. Natural Selection

Diurus, Pascoe. sp. 1). declivity of the elytra, but distinguished. Length (the rostrum and tails 26 included) mm. Deep. exception

22. The Resource Games 04/24/2017

The. ~By~ Enjoy! The (unknown to some) life of the jellyfish. Respect that fact!!!

D irections. The Sea Turtle s Built-In Compass. by Sudipta Bardhan

Animal Adaptations Woodland Animal Fact Sheet

Agenda. Warm-up: Look in your notebook for your grades. Review Notes on Genetic Variation Rat Island. Retake: Monday- last day!!!

AMERICAN ALLIGATOR. Alligator mississippiensis. Map. Picture Picture Picture

If you go back far enough, everything lived in the sea. At various points in

Title. Grade level. Time. Student Target. Materials. PART 2 Lesson: Nesting. PART 2 Activity: Are you my Mother? minutes

Half Yearly Examination for Primary Schools Year 5 ENGLISH (Listening Comprehension) Time: 30 minutes. Teacher s copy

Jayhawk Area Council Boy Scout Merit Badge Day at the Topeka Zoo Sunday, October 23, 2016

There was a different theory at the same time as Darwin s theory.

Reprinted from: CRUSTACEANA, Vol. 32, Part 2, 1977 LEIDEN E. J. BRILL

Females lay between 2 and 15 eggs 30 days after mating. These hatch after approximately 2 months. Deserts and scrublands in Southern Mexico

(170) COURTSHIP AND DISPLAY OF THE SLAVONIAN GREBE.

Amphibians and Reptiles Division B

SPRING CLEANING AHEAD!

Why to never buy painted shells for your hermit crabs, and why to never buy a hermit crab already in a painted shell.

28 BARBOUR, Three Cuban Birds.

THE CHILDREN S ZOO. Scavenger Hunt GRADES K-3

Dinosaur! by David Orme. Perfection Learning

Arch Metal Aquarium Stand - 10 / / E ASY A SSEMBLY I NSTRUCTIONS AND P ARTS L IST

Forest Characters T E AC H ER PAG E. Directions: Print out the cards double-sided, so that the picture is on one side and the text on the other.

American Marten. American Marten. American Marten

Examples of herbivorous animals: rabbits, deer and beaver

had its spleen exteriorized on June 4th and the colon operation performed 8th, 1928, and the spleen exteriorized on October 18th.

Year 6 English Reading Comprehension Time: 50 mins. English Reading Comprehension. Total: 30 marks

Northeast Florida Threatened and Endangered Animals

House mice and rodents in historic buildings and museums.

African Tracks and Signs Course by Chris & Mathilde Stuart. Paws without Claws

and Other Dinosaurs of Asia by Dougal Dixon Sample file illustrated by Steve Weston and James Field

The Arctic fox in Scandinavia yesterday, today and tomorrow.

Station #4. All information Adapted from: and other sites

Bears and You. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission MyFWC.com

Teachers Notes The Wombat and the Grand Poohjam

The birds of London. Reading Practice

XSEED Summative Assessment Test 1

ELLESMERE PORT WAR MEMORIAL PROJECT

Porcupine. Erethizon dorsatum. North American porcupine, Canadian porcupine, common porcupine.

Socialization and Bonding

FOUR NEW PHILIPPINE SPECIES OF FRESH-WATER SHRIMPS OF THE GENUS CARIDINA

Pairing Behavior in Thick-Clawed Porcelain Crabs

CHARACTERISTIC COMPARISON. Green Turtle - Chelonia mydas

SOP #: Date Issue: Effective Date: Date Last Revision: Page 1 of 5. PPE, approved restraining devices. Disposable gloves, cap, mask, lab coat

James wants a dog. Questions. 1) What kind of pet does James want? A. a bird B. a cat C. a dog

Teaching grade 1/2 students who have reading comprehension difficulties to paraphrase will increase their literal comprehension.

A NEW PLIOCENE FOSSIL CRAB OF THE GENUS (Trichopeltarion) FROM NEW ZEALAND

Amazing oceans. Age 3-5 years. Contents

Grade Level: 1-2. Next Generation Sunshine State Standards SC.1.L.14.1; SC.1.L.17.1; SC.1.N.1.1 SC.2.L.17.1; SC.2.L.17.2; SC.2.N.1.

Adaptation Creature Creation Addison Swenson, Cora Glass, Alexander Young: Lesson for 3rd-5th graders: Green and Health Schools Focus Areas:

Panchatantra Stories. Kumud Singhal. Purna Vidya 1

How Do Species Adapt to Different Environments?

Breeding the Common Golden-Backed Woodpecker in Captivity Dinopium javanense

PLANTS & ANIMALS. By: Mrs. Giesen s Class

Volume XV, Edition 26 n2y.com SEA TURTLES. The sea turtles are coming! Sea turtles begin making nests each March.

Cheetah Outreach Animal Enrichment Plan

Grade 4 FSA ELA Writing Practice Test

Nautilus Behavior in Aquaria

Please visit for more information and lots of wonderful behavioural tips!

NOTES ON NEST-SITES OF THE OYSTER-CATCHER AND THE LONG-EARED OWL AS A HOLE BREEDER

Discover Your Inner Hermit Crab: The Fifteenth Shermans Lagoon Collection (Sherman's Lagoon Collections) By Jim Toomey

Amazing oceans. Age 3-5 years. Contents

@F the great multitude of different animds

Tim Flach More Than Human - Extended Text

DIBELS Next Student Materials

Piecing Together the Story of Dinosaurs from Fossils By Readworks

Australian Animals. Andrea Buford Arkansas State University

Transcription:

An<fre.u)*, C. n/. /9/o ON THE ROBBER BY [From the CRAB DR. C. W. PROCEEDINGS (BIRGUS ANDREWS, or F.R.S., LATRO). F.Z.S. THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON woe.].invertebrate 7nni npv [Publislied April 1910.] v I ' Crustacea OJAN 9 lail ' 2 i s-a-qs

1909.] OX THE ROBBER CA^B (BIRGUS LATRO). 887 [From the PROCEEDINGS OF THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON", 1909.] [Published April 1910.] Dr. r O. W. Andrews, F.R.S., F.Z.S., exhibited an enlarged photograph (PI. LXXXIII.) of the Robber Orab (.Birgus latro) on Christmas Island, and communicated the following account of its habits: It is somewhat remarkable that although the Robber or Coconut Orab (Birgiis latro) has been known for some centuries and [1]

888 DR. C. W. ANDREWS ON THE [Dec. 14, its habits described by numerous observers, there is still considerable doubt and difference of opinion concerning it. This uncertainty probably arises from two causes first, that the habits of this animal do actually differ considerably in different localities, and, second, that the unreliable reports of natives have often been accepted as authentic. The chief point on which observers differ is whether this Crustacean can or cannot climb trees : thus Chun (Aus den Tiefen des Weltmeeres (1900), p. 414) states that the natives of Diego Garcia say they never have seen it do so, but since on the same authority, it is stated that these crabs carry coconut shells of sea-water with them into the woods, it does not seem necessary to attach much importance to their tales. On the other hand, most observers agree that Birgns can and does climb palm trees, and that this statement is correct is proved by the photograph taken by me in Christmas Island, showing two crabs actually on the trunk of the native Sago-palm (Arenga listeri) : the upper one is ascending and the lower descending. Numerous other individuals are seen round the foot of the tree, taking advantage of the fruit dropped by their more enterprising companions which have ascended in search of it. In climbing, the large claws are scarcely used at all, the animal clinging to the tree trunk by the sharp points of the walking legs ; by the same means nearly vertical faces of rock, where there is apparently little foothold, can be ascended and descended. Although there is no doubt that these crabs can and do feed on coconuts when they can get them, these are by no means their only food as would seem to be implied by some accounts. In Christmas Island during my first visit (1897-8) there were no bearing coconut palms so far as I was aware, and though there may have been a few on one small beach on the east coast, these could only have supplied food for a few individuals. The ordinary food included fruits of various kinds, particularly those of the Sago-palm (Arenga listeri) and of the Screw-pines (Pandctnus), and carrion of all sorts, even the bodies of their own relations. Their discrimination is not very keen, for they will drag away almost anything that has been handled, such as cooking utensils, bottles, geological hammers, and clothes. In one case I had a geological hammer practically ruined by having its handle splintered in the powerful claws of one of these creatures. It is usually stated that Birgus is nocturnal in its habits, and probably this is usually the case, but in Christmas Island they move about the forest and feed even in the brightest daylight (as is shown by the photograph). Formerly, when the native rats swarmed in the forest after dark, the crabs moved about comparatively little at night, and might often be seen clinging to the trunk of a tree two or three feet from the ground. Now, the rats having become extinct, the crabs wander about at night and are a great nuisance, dragging from the camp anything they can get hold of that seems edible. On one occasion I saw a large individual carrying off a coconut from which the husk had been [2]

1909.] BOBBER CRAB (BIRGUS LATRO). 889 removed ; it held the nut under its body with some of its walking legs while it walked off raised high on the tips of the others. These animals are easily frightened and scuttle off backwards, propelling themselves with their long anterior legs in a series of ungainly jerks. They seem quite conscious of the comparative defencelessness of the abdomen, which they endeavour to thrust under logs or into holes among the roots of trees. They never carry any protective covering on the abdominal region, although in the Cambridge Natural History (vol. iv. p. 174), it is stated that they may sometimes employ an empty coconut shell for this purpose. No authority is given for this statement, nor does there appear to be any reference to it in previously published accounts, and from what I have seen I should think that the thing is an impossibility. A species of Coenobita, a closely allied genus, has been described as using a coconut shell for this purpose, and a figure of it carrying one is given in Prof. J. S. Gardiner's ' Fauna and Geography of the Maldive and Laccadive Archipelagoes,' vol. i. p. 69 ; probably this has been confused with JBirgus. The photograph now reproduced (PI. LXXXIII.) has been exhibited in the Natural History Museum (South Kensington) for some time, but as there still seems to be some doubt as to the climbing habits of these crabs, it has been thought desirable to publish it. [3]

P. Z. S. 1 9 0 9 C W Andrews, p h o t o ROBBER PI. LXXXII1 Bale & D a m e i s s o n CRABS (BIRGUS LATRO) CLIMBING A SAGO-PALM.