Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Agreed that we need some more pics here - moderately bright, white light pics of the full top/back (the dorsal side) of the crab as well as of the face/claws (the front) of the crab would be helpful.Hopefully @ISpeakForTheSeas can come in on this. But the previous poster is correct. Better pics will be needed, and some crabs are not good at all. If you have the ability to trap it, I would do so until you know for sure.
BAD BAD BAD. Checks all the boxes for a NOT reef safe crab (reef dangerous I guess lol).@ISpeakForTheSeas got a better pic. Thank you for any help. He has grown tremendously in such a short time and has now come to the front of the glass during feeding. He loves to snap at my fish and I’m sure would love to eat one. What a cool crab!
Definitely a swimming crab (I'm not very familiar with the superfamily at this point; these crabs don't typically show up in our tanks); the Blotched Swimming Crab, Achelous spinimanus is a good guess.Maybe a blotched swimming crab?
Yeah, no info on this crab's specific diet, but swimming crabs are generalist carnivores/omnivorous scavengers; they primarily feed on fish, bivalves, snails, and shrimp, but they have also been known to eat some algae, brittle starfish, hermit crabs, etc.@BristleWormHater thank you for your quick reply! What a cool little crab. It appears that he is a carnivore?