When we scuba dive in Hawai‘i we are always on the lookout for the large crown of thorn starfish. This venomous, foot-wide starfish eats live coral and it is native to Hawai‘i. Sometimes the crown of thorns population gets out of control and can eat up an entire coral reef.
You can tell a coral that has been eaten by the crown of thorns because there will be a pure white circle on a brown coral. That is where the starfish ate the coral polyps and only the white hard coral skeleton remains.
I have seen several coral reefs in Hawai‘i get devastated by the crown of thorns, but some of the branching corals survived the crown-of-thorns attack. I started to study the remaining live corals, and each one had several coral guard crabs living deep down in the branching coral.
These tiny, one-to-two-inch-wide crabs protect the large, branching corals from being eaten by predator starfish and snails. The tiny, bright-orange coral guard crabs are quite feisty, have large, powerful pinchers, and they won’t let anything invade or eat their coral home.
The coral guard crab will bite off the tiny feet of the large crown of thorns starfish if it tries to invade the coral they are living in. The starfish after losing a few of its tube feet to the aggressive crab will go find another coral to eat that is not protected by coral guard crabs. The corals that house the crabs produce fats from their coral polyps that the guard crabs feed on.
In nature this is called “mutualism.” The coral feeds the crabs that live in their branches and the crabs protect the coral from predators, and that is a win-win situation for both the coral and crab.
It seems like every branching coral on the reef would want to have coral guard crabs protecting it, but only certain corals house the bright-orange crabs, and we are not sure why.
Maybe only certain corals produce food for the crabs to eat, as a coral guard crab won’t protect a coral if it is not getting fed by that coral. The next time you go on a snorkel and see a large, branching antler coral, look close down into the branches and see if that coral has its own coral guard crabs!
You can see the coral guard crabs in action in my marine life educational movie series on my YouTube at Underwater2web.
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Terry Lilley is a marine biologist living in Hanalei and co-founder of Reef Guardians Hawai‘i, a nonprofit on a mission to provide education and resources to protect the coral reef. To donate to Reef Guardians Hawaii go to www.reefguardianshawaii.org.
Many acropora and pocillopora coral have commensurate coral crabs living within the colony. They catch random food particles and live off the coral mucous. The Trapezia Pocillopora/Acropora Crab, or Acro Crab for short, is a small commensal crustacean which lives its whole life within the branches of Pocillopora corals and Acropora Corals if no Pocilloporid corals are available, aiding in the proper water flow between the branches to keep these areas clean. In a symbiotic relationship with its host coral, the Trapezia Pocillopora/Acropora Crab is thought to feed on particulates trapped by the coral polyps, fallen detritus, and the coral’s secreted mucus. In turn, the crabs guard the coral from invaders and fend off predators.