What is the impact of the Chinese mitten crab?
Impacts. The burrowing activities of Chinese mitten crabs cause damage to dikes, levees, and stream banks and increase erosion, which can cause weakening or collapse of flood control and water supply systems.
How did the Chinese mitten crab get its name?
∎ The Mitten crab received its name from the dense patch of fur-like hair on its claws which resemble mittens.
How did Chinese mitten crabs get here?
The most probable mechanism of introduction to the estuary was deliberate release to establish a fishery (in Asia, the mitten crab is a delicacy and crabs have been imported live illegally to markets in Los Angeles and San Francisco) or accidental release via ballast water.
What is the Chinese mitten crab also known as?
(Chinese mitten crab)
Where are mitten crabs found?
Native to East Asia, the Chinese mitten crab can be found on coasts from Japan to the mainland of China, the Korean Peninsula and along the Yellow Sea. It can also be found on the coasts of northern and eastern Europe and the United States, and has been reported in small numbers in the Chesapeake Bay.
How can mitten crabs be a problem in our Delta?
Mitten crabs by the thousands clogged a cooling system in a delta power plant last year. There could be more such problems as the crab population explodes. The crabs feed on plant and animal life and could reduce stocks of clams, worms and other water life needed for ecological balance.
Is the mitten crab extinct?
Chinese mitten crabs haven’t been seen in California since 2010. A more low-budget version of the story played out on the East Coast. Over a hundred mitten crabs have shown their claws in the Hudson River since 2007. Dozens more turned up in Chesapeake Bay, Delaware Bay and New Jersey.
When was the Chinese mitten crab introduced?
1992
The Chinese Mitten Crab was first discovered on the west coast of California in 1992, indicating that they could possibly spread to B.C. waters via coastal commercial shipping activities.
When were Chinese mitten crab introduced?
The Chinese mitten crab was first identified in the south San Francisco Bay in 1992 by commercial shrimp trawlers, and quickly spread to the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers. The most identifiable feature is the dense patch of setae (or “fur”) on its white-tipped claws.
Why do mitten crabs have fur?
The most identifiable feature is the dense patch of setae (or “fur”) on its white-tipped claws. The purpose of these “furry” mittens is still unknown. The adult is sexually dimorphic (the male looks different from the female); the male crabs have more setae on their claws than the females.
What do mitten crabs eat?
They are omnivorous and eat vegetation, detritus, mollusks, crustaceans (amphipods, water fleas, and shrimp), fish, and aquatic insects. The Chinese mitten crab is native to the coastal rivers and estuaries of the Yellow Sea in China and Korea.
Why are mitten crabs illegal?
When eaten raw or lightly cooked, they can transmit a parasite that attacks human lungs. “Wildlife laws prohibit mitten crabs, listed as an ‘injurious species,’ from being imported into the U.S.,” says Eva Lara-Figuerdo, a wildlife inspector with the United States Fish and Wildlife Service based in Atlanta, Georgia.
Where did the Chinese mitten crab come from?
The Chinese mitten crab has a long history as an invader. The crab was accidentally introduced to Germany in the early 1900s.
How can we detect and assess the status of Chinese mitten crabs?
We need your help to detect and assess the status of Chinese Mitten Crabs. The “Mitten Crab Watch” website provides information on the invasion of the mitten crab and allows users to more easily report catches. Please help us detect live mitten crabs by reporting any sighting in North America.
Where can I find information about the mitten crab invasion?
The “Mitten Crab Watch” website provides information on the invasion of the mitten crab and allows users to more easily report catches. Please help us detect live mitten crabs by reporting any sighting in North America.
Is there a Japanese mitten crab in Oregon?
A single male Japanese mitten crab ( Eriocheir japonica) was caught in the Columbia River, Oregon in 1998. The species is very similar to the Chinese mitten crab currently found in California, and its presence was most likely the result of someone’s attempt to introduce it to the watershed.