The Cranky Crab That Restores Cordgrass

A European Green Crab looking particularly crusty (Photo by  / )

 

The 鈥檚 demeanor has made it a long-despised and feared invasive. Originally carried from Europe鈥檚 northern coastline across the pond by ballast water, this cranky crustacean has aggressive tactics that destroy the species it hunts and drive away native competitors. But now researchers reveal in a that this aggression is serving a positive purpose, as it helps to heal the cordgrass stretches of Cape Cod, New England.

, a plant that grows in waves on salt marshes and tidal flats, has come to symbolize the disastrous impacts wrought by . When a saltmarsh ecosystem has been damaged, it shows up in balding stretches, as cordgrass thins and dies off. The cause of this disappearance is another crab, the Sesarma reticulatum or , which feasts on fresh new cordgrass shoots.

But like everything in the food chain, the purple marsh crab鈥檚 rising impact is driven by something else. As intensive fishing and crabbing has taken hold of the landscape over the past several decades, the purple marsh crab鈥檚 natural predators were driven down, leaving the species to spread and dine copiously on cordgrass. The crabs also burrow beneath the marsh, leaving soil weakened and more likely to erode.

It might seem unlikely that the green crab, renowned especially for its destructive tendencies, would improve this scenario. 鈥淚t eats about everything,鈥 said marine ecologist and study author of . 鈥淚n terms of biodiversity, it鈥檚 hell on wheels.鈥

So how has it rescued the marsh? Well, 鈥榬escuing鈥 might be an overstatement鈥擝ertness points out that the marshes are already altered so badly that they need more than just the green crab鈥檚 help. But nevertheless, the researchers found that patches of marsh populated with more green crabs were faring better than those without. They noticed that not only were the invasive creatures occupying burrows like those of the purple marsh crab, but that they were actually taking over the burrows of purple marsh crabs they had either killed or driven out.

This explains the green crab鈥檚 two-pronged strategy: it pushes out competitors by pure force鈥攚ith the help of powerful pincers and its larger size鈥攁nd also by simply scaring the daylights out of purple marsh crabs. The researchers established this via two experiments. First, they found that purple marsh crabs left in cages with green crabs had only a 14 % survival rate. The rest were crushed and dismembered. In cages where just one green crab paraded in amongst a number of purple marsh crabs, the latter rather comically saw fit to stay underground for the duration of the month-long experiment.  

By moving in and evicting purple marsh crabs from cordgrass saltmarsh, the green crab has helped to manage what was once an unchecked population. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to acknowledge that introduced species will in some cases provide an unintended benefit, and this is a cool one,鈥 said , an ecologist at the , not a study author, to Science. However, he acknowledged that it couldn鈥檛 be a one-size-fits-all approach. 鈥淸The green crab] may have a positive effect in New England,鈥 he said. 鈥淚ts track record elsewhere is quite different.鈥

In Cape Cod, the crab鈥檚 contribution may help cordgrass gather just enough momentum to regrow in patches, and perhaps to slowly spread its soft waves across the marsh again.