The coconut crab – the world’s largest land crab – can weigh over 4 kg (8.8 lbs) and span nearly a meter (3 feet) across.
This guy can rip open a coconut with its power-claws, and it can also climb trees (ouch)! And, it could be the animal that devoured Amelia Earhart…
“Monstrous.”
That was the word that left Charles Darwin’s lips when he first saw a coconut crab. And indeed, it’s no ordinary crab. It’s strong enough to carry more than six times its own weight.
In Darwin’s days, there were rumors that the crabs could climb trees and dangle from them for hours on a single pincer, holding on by nothing more than a single pincer-like some massive overgrown spider. There were stories that their claws were so strong that they could break through a coconut. And there were stories that they could tear a human being apart, limb by limb.
Darwin didn’t believe most of these rumors, but in the end they turned out to be no exaggeration. Since then, we’ve discovered that every story about this horrifying-looking creature is actually true.
A coconut crab on the beach. Photo: John Tann/Wikimedia Commons
Take their pincers, for example. They are some of the most powerful and most dangerous weapons in the entire animal kingdom. If you’re unlucky enough to have one of them clamp down on your leg, its grip will have as much power as a bite from a lion’s jaws.
Yes, you’ve read that right. It’s no coincidence that the people in this picture don’t move. At all.
Although coconut crabs don’t really have a taste for (live) humans, these people had to watch out for their moves when, lured by the smell of food, an army of crabs swarmed their garden party. Source
Thanks god, they hardly use those terrifying claws on humans as their main source of food is coconuts, as their name suggests. And they have no problems tearing a coconut apart with nothing more than their bare claws, which is kind of alarming..
But, these crabs aren’t too picky with their diet – they’ll eat just about anything. They’ve been observed hunting and killing birds, tearing apart live pigs, and even cannibalizing the corpses of the fellow members of their species. And, they’ll even eat their own dried-up shell when it’s time for it to fall off and give way to a new one. They eat it whole, chewing up slowly. Yikes…
Similarly to the party-goers, this dog doesn’t fidget around too much either when encountering a troop of coconut crabs. Source
Tearing a coconut apart doesn’t happen very quickly though. The process can actually take several days before the coconut is opened by the crab. And that’s where another interesting ability of these animals comes into the picture.
These gigantic crabs are excellent climbers – they can basically climb anything they see. They can take a coconut from the ground and cut it to a husk nut, take it with their claw, climb up a tree 10 m (33 ft) high and drop the husk nut, to access the coconut flesh inside quickly. Even more surprisingly, they often descend from the trees by falling, and can survive a fall of at least 4.5 m (15 ft) unhurt!
Coconut crabs are excellent climbers. Photo: Brocken Inaglory
The pincers of these crabs are so strong that they can hang off anything they can get a hold of for hours, be it the branches of a tree, the chains in a fence, or the walls around a home. They don’t just climb trees to get fruit, though. In some places, they mostly prey on birds, by climbing to the tops of trees to attack them and drag them down to the underground burrows where they live.
Here’s a video demonstrating their incredible climbing abilities.
As already pointed out, coconut crabs don’t usually try to hurt people, but there can be exceptions. Humans are their only predators, and when pushed, they will strike back. For example, when searching for coconut husks, the natives of the Pacific Islands often reach their fingers into the crabs’ burrows, trying to steal the food they had left behind. But the unlucky can find more than just coconuts. When the crabs inside the burrows strike, the men can find their fingers caught in the powerful grips of their claws – a really dismal experience.
The most horrific story of all might as well be the answer to one of history’s great mysteries. In 1940, researchers found a fractured skeleton on Nikumaroro Island that had born torn apart, limb from limb. Many believe that what they found was the body of American aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart – and that she had been torn apart by coconut crabs.
Amelia Earhart photographed shortly before her death. Image credit: NASA on The Commons
Earhart is believed to have crashed on the island and was left on a beach either bleeding or dead. What might have happened next is probably most humanely described the following account by Mark Laidre, a biologist who has extensively studied coconut crabs:
“In the middle of the night, I observed a coconut crab attack and kill an adult red-footed booby. The booby had been sleeping on a low-lying branch, less than a meter up the tree. The crab slowly climbed up and grabbed the booby’s wing with its claw, breaking the bone and causing the booby to fall to the ground.”
Then, the crab climbed down to finish it all off. “The crab then approached the bird, grabbing and breaking its other wing,” Laidre recalled. No matter how much the booby struggled or pecked at the hard shell of the crab, it couldn’t get it to let go.
Then the swarm came. “Five more coconut crabs came to the site within 20 minutes, likely cueing in on the blood. As the booby lay paralyzed, the crabs fought, eventually tearing the bird apart.” Finally, each of them carried a limb or a hunk of meat from the mutilated bird’s body back down to its underground burrow, and there they fed.
A coconut crab atop a coconut. But they don’t always eat coconut… Photo: fearlessRich
in 2007, a team of scientists ran a test to see what the crabs would have done to poor Earhart. They left a pig carcass at the site where she was believed to have crashed.
As expected, the crabs crawled out of their homes and tore the pig to shreds. Then, they dragged whatever they could find down to their underground lairs and ate the flesh off of the bones.
But these animals have more reason to fear us than we have to fear them. Earhart may be among the very few persons to ever have been killed by a coconut crab, while we’ve actually turned them into an endangered species. Once commonly found on many tropical Indo-Pacific islands, coconut crab populations have been greatly reduced by the exact same forces that doomed the dodo (namely overhunting and habitat destruction).
So, after all, is it not us who are ‘monstrous’?