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The Vent Crab
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University of Delaware marine biologist Ana Dittel answers questions about Bythograea thermydron (pronounced "Bith-oh-gray-uh ther-me-drawn"), the top predator at hydrothermal vents.


Question Where does this crab live?
Answer At vent sites in the eastern Pacific Ocean among dense clusters of tubeworms at an average depth of 2.7 kilometers (1.7 mi).



Question What does it eat?
Like other crabs, the vent crab seems to have a very good sense of smell. This is important in locating food. We’ve observed it feeding on several species of deep-sea worms, as well as clams and mussels. Also, some studies have suggested that the adult crabs feed on bacterial mats. These are colonies of bacteria so dense they are visible to the naked eye.



Question How abundant is this crab?
Answer

It’s present in such high numbers at vent sites that Alvin’s pilots actually use it as an indicator that we are approaching an active vent field.




It appears that this crab has eyes. Can it see in the dark? How does it find prey?
The growth stage beyond the larval stage is called the megalopa. At this stage, the crab has well-developed eyes that can sense light levels expected at depths around 1,000 meters in the water column. In contrast, once the megalopae develop into adult crabs, they basically have night vision as can be found in night-vision goggles. See this recent news article.



Question Why do you think the megalopa stage is red, and the adult stage is white?
Answer

The bright red coloration seen in the megalopa (post-larval stage) is due to high concentrations of carotenoid pigments. In contrast, the adult crabs have low concentrations of carotenoids.




Why are you studying it?
What most intrigues me about this crab is how it colonizes new vents. Vent fields may be separated by many hundreds of kilometers, so how do new sites become colonized? To find out what strategies or mechanisms this crab uses, we are studying how its early life stages (larvae) disperse and where they develop.



Question Do these crabs inhabit vent sites in other oceans in addition to the Pacific?
Answer

There are several genera and species of vent crabs. For example, Bythograea thermydron, Bythograea microps, and Cyanograea are found along the East Pacific Rise, while Austinograea williamsi is common in the western Pacific. Segonzacia mesatlantica is found in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge in the Atlantic Ocean.




Are these crabs good swimmers?
When we did our laboratory studies at atmospheric pressure (which is more than 250 times less than the pressure of the deep-sea environment), we found that megalopae are very good swimmers. Speeds in warm water were comparable to those of the fastest-swimming megalopae of shallow-water forms like the blue crab Callinectes sapidus. Even at low temperatures typical of bottom waters near the vents (2–5°C), megalopae are capable of sustained swimming speeds of 4 centimeters per second. That’s fast!



Question How do you maintain them in the lab?
Answer We are able to maintain the larval stages and small juveniles at room temperature and atmospheric pressure. However, the adults are pressure-sensitive and do not survive long at atmospheric pressure. Therefore, we must keep them in pressure chambers.



Is there anything else we should know about vent crabs?
Answer There are many interesting and important aspects of the biology of these crabs that we do not know about. For example, we do not know how long it takes for the larvae to develop or where these larvae develop. We do not know how long they live, and more importantly we still do not know how they colonize new vents.

 

Copyright University of Delaware, November 2003