• he/him

I've not gotten any good at writing descriptions since I first made my tumblr and by god I'm not about to start now.


www.in-mutual-weirdness.tumblr.com

dismallyOriented
@dismallyOriented

Hey y'all. Lighter effort-post this week in the interest of not kerploding myself. I'm not gonna hold to a precisely weekly schedule because someday the effortposts will return and those will be biweekly by necessity. But in the meantime I can talk about lighter, less explain-y shit.

A Personal History of Crabs

So as someone who's worked a few years in coastal ecology, I have had to interact with crabs a bunch. They're abundant little fuckers and of pretty high interest to humans, whether because we like eating them, or because they like eating things we eat (i.e. oysters). Personally I find them kind of high effort for little meat compared to like, clams or lobsters, though I'd be lying if I said it wasn't fun to just crack one entirely open and scoop out the innards. The soft animal of my body enjoys eating whole seafood.[^1]

There are 4 kinds of crab I've had a lot of close contact with and therefore have warm fuzzy feelings about. Two of which were for science and job reasons, and the other two of which is for them being all over the place. Honorary mentions to these guys include:

Mud crabs (Panopeus herbstii)
Close up photo of a black-fingered mud crab. It is a very small crab with a mottled brown shell and pointed legs.

and Fiddler crabs (several from the places I've worked, but the specific one here is Leptuca panacea)
Close up photo of two Gulf sand fiddler crabs in a standoff. They're two sandy-grey colored crabs, with prominent stalk eyes and one oversized claw that's as long as their body. One faces to the right while the other faces away from the camera. Both are reared up to full height, with their large claw raised in a threat display.

Both these guys were all over the marshes and beaches. Mud crabs in particular are popular residents of oyster reefs, where they can use all the various nooks and crannies between the shellfish to hide. Which is good, because while they're still predators, they're tiny as hell and therefore common pickings for larger crabs, or fish. The fiddlers were fun because whenever I would walk down to the beach to see a particular field site, you'd see them all swarming away from the people, or the water when the waves came in. The oversized claw is a feature of sexual dimorphism, and the males use them to fight (and, occasionally, to plug the mud hole they've buried themselves into). You could look at a marsh bank when the water was low and see the mud all pockmarked with holes. There's lil guys in there.


dismallyOriented
@dismallyOriented

I've never played an Elder Scrolls game in my life. This is delightful. Yes there are irl mud crabs, and they're all tiny as hell. Fingertip sized lil guys. I have no idea what if any resemblance exists between them.


You must log in to comment.

in reply to @dismallyOriented's post:

Fun fact, the hard clam/northern quahog (pronounce coh-hog) is known as Mercenaria mercenaria. I'd kind of assumed the latin name was chosen due to having something to do with shelled creatures. It's damn hard sometimes to get etymology for scientific nomenclature terms but according to wikipedia and mirriam-webster, the Mercenaria for the clam genus comes from their use as wampum beads by Native Americans in the region. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_clam) So, mercenaria in the commerce sense. Not sure how it applies for this crab

And yeah, my character is Opa Nippe after the genus name Menippe. It's fun mining species names for inspo.

YEAAA CRABS I LOVE CRABS!!! there's no feeling of terror quite like having a blue crab pinch down on your finger and refuse to let go while you struggle to free yourself in the most gentle way possible bc its other claw has already pinched your dad's finger (which is why u got pinched in the first place, trying to help him)

The first time I've ever sworn in front of an employer was during my undergrad internship. We were tethering crabs for a film crew trying to get footage for a documentary (temporarily tying crabs in place with dental floss to keep them in shot). I got pinched by one and shouted fuck in front of the lab manager. Thankfully marine science labs are incredibly blase about "professionalism" lol. I think most people find it funny when the undergrad swears.

Easiest way to get them to let go is by putting them back into water. Though sometimes you do just have to flail around if they've grabbed onto a net you're using.

omg 😭 i hope you were able to extricate yourself pretty quickly! glad it was just a haha moment for everyone though (except you i guess sldfkjsd)

that's very good info to know!! i will keep that in mind for future crab encounters!

in reply to @dismallyOriented's post: