Life in the mud "18:30.13N 64:21.82W"

VulcanSpirit
Richard & Alison Brunstrom
Sun 18 Dec 2011 01:13
We're in North Sound, Virgin Gorda anchored next to Prickly Pear Island upon which there is a shallow salt lagoon. When we were last here in the Spring it was dry but at this time of year it teems with life.
 
The guys below are Salt Pan Fiddler Crabs, Uca bergersi  which have a body about the size of a large pea. There are loads of species of these little fiddler crabs around the world, all apparently closely related because they are all in the genus Uca. Here they are, sitting in the shallows at the edge of the pond in their thousands.
 
 
The males have one large claw orange used for signalling and display and one small grey one used for feeding. Some species are very territorial and very aggressive to each other. You can see the size difference below:
 
 
And interestingly, they come right-handed and left-handed, just like us:
 
 
The crabs sit in large numbers mostly at the edge of these highly saline lagoons. They have excellent eyesight (you can see their eyes on stalks in the pictures) and move away in unison from any approaching figure rather like a shoal of fish. This leads to a quite comical wave of running crabs some few feet in advance of a prowling human.
I think thy're cute.