Fabia subquadrata (Dana, 1851)Common name(s): Grooved mussel crab, mussel crab, pea crab, parasitic pea crab, clam crab |
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| Synonyms: Raphnotus subquadrata, Pinnotheres concharum, Cryptophyrs concharum, misspelled as Faba subquadrata | ![]() |
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| Fabia subquadrata, a small gravid female, dorsal view. Scale in background is millimeters. The brown globules are eggs, most of which are tucked under the abdomen and create the dark stripe, but some are up in the gill chambers and can be seen readily through the exoskeleton. This is a soft stage. | |
| (Photo by: Dave Cowles, May 2009). This individual was found in the mantle chamber of a Nuttallia obscurata clam purchased from a local supermarket in May, 2009. | |
How to Distinguish from Similar Species: Pinnotheres spp. have a soft carapace, nearly straight dactyls, and no dorsal longitudinal groove behind each eye. The setae on legs 3 and 4 of Scleroplax granulata are not longer than those on the other legs, plus it lives in the burrows of Thalassinideans such as Neotrypaea andUpogebia. Most other Pinnotherids have a carapace more than 1.5x as wide as it is long. F. concharum, the smooth mussel crab which lives in California, does not have the dorsal longitudinal grooves in the carapace.
Geographical Range: Akutan Pass, Alaska to Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico
Depth Range: Intertidal to 220 m
Habitat: Planktonic, or lives commensally or parasitically within bivalves such as Modiolus modiolus, Mytilus californianus, Tresus capax, Mytilus trossulus, Mya arenaria, Astarte compacta, Cardita ventricosa, Crenella columbia, Nuttallia obscurata (not reported in the literature but that is where I found it), or Kellia spp.
Biology/Natural History: This species lives within bivalves. Unlike some other pea crabs, only one individual is found within the host (e.g., not usually a male-female pair). Juveniles settle from the plankton and enter a bivalve host where they remain soft. After 7 or more molts they molt to adults, which have hardened integument. The adults swim through the plankton, where females are fertilized in the early summer. Males apparently die soon afterward (a few may re-enter a mussel), but females enter new mussel hosts, molt 5 more times to the soft stage seen here, lay eggs, and fertilize them from her store of sperm. Mating takes place in late May in Puget Sound. It takes the female about 21-26 weeks from the time she re-enters a mussel until she produces her eggs. Eggs are found in November in Puget Sound (but note the May date above for this individual).
The gravid females damage the clam's gills plus take food from the clam so they should probably be considered parasitic rather than commensal.
The most common host for this species in the Puget Sound area is Modiolus modiolus. Off California the crab is found in 1 to 3% of the mussels (Ricketts et al., 1985) or up to 80% according to Hinton, 1987, and in 18% of the Modiolus population off Vancouver Island. Ricketts et al. state that mature crabs are found only in mussels, which was disproven by this individual. Ricketts et al.k also report that at San Juan Island they could not be found in Mytilus mussels, though Hinton states that they are the favored host in California. O'Clair and O'Clair state that Modiolus capax is the preferred host in Alaska.
Since gravid
females are so much larger than males and are soft, they were originally
described as separate species.
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General References:
Hart,
1982
Hinton,
1987
Jensen,
1995
Kozloff,
1993
Lamb
and Hanby, 2005
Morris
et al., 1980
O'Clair
and O'Clair, 1998
Ricketts
et al., 1985
Scientific Articles:
Irvine, Alfred John, 1960. Laboratory culture methods and larval stages of Fabia subquadrata (Dana). Master's Thesis, Walla Walla College. 52 pp.
Pearce, J.B., 1966. The biology of the mussel crab, Fabia subquadrata, from the waters of San Juan Archipelago, Washington. Pacific Science 20:1 pp. 3-35
Web sites:
General Notes and Observations: Locations,
abundances, unusual behaviors:
The dactyls
are strongly curved. Setae
on legs 3 and 4, especially on the dorsal edge of the merus, are long and
featherlike. According to Hart (1982), the legs of gravid
females have few setae
while males and non-gravid
females have many more setae
(which may be used for swimming), plus hard carapaces.
Hard individuals (mature males and non-gravid
females) have more opaque carapaces,
flatter legs, more long setae
on the legs, and red articulations on the carapace.
This individual seems intermediate between these conditions.
This closeup dorsal view of the carapace
shows the egg clusters in the gill chamber. The dorsal longitudinal
grooves extending back from the orbits
as well as the transverse
groove can also be seen.
This ventral view shows the larger cluster of eggs carried on the abdomen,
as is normal for Brachyuran crabs (and other members of Suborder Pleocyemata).
I have not heard reports of other brachyuran crabs which have some of their
eggs up in the gill chambers, as this individual does. Also, several
references state that in gravid
females the abdomen is wider than the carapace,
but that is not true of this individual. Johnson and Snook (1955)
state that the propodus has two rows of setae
on the ventral side. The outer row extends to the base of the fixed
finger while the inner row extends to the tip. Those rows can be
seen here.
This dorsal view shows the chelae. The tips of the chelae can
cross.