Invasion History
First Non-native North American Tidal Record:First Non-native West Coast Tidal Record:
First Non-native East/Gulf Coast Tidal Record:
General Invasion History:
Scylla serrata is widely distributed in the Indian and tropical Western Pacific Ocean, from South Africa, the Red Sea, and southern Japan east to New Zealand and Tahiti. It inhabits estuaries and mangrove swamps, ranging from marine to fresh waters (Keenan et al. 1998). In an attempt to start a fishery, S. serrata was intentionally released to the Gulf coast of Florida and Hawaii. Populations in Florida never established, but S. serrata is now abundant in the Hawaiian Islands.
North American Invasion History:
Invasion History on the Gulf Coast:
In 1962, approximately 30 pairs of Scylla serrata were introduced into Pumpkin Bay, Collier Co., Florida, on the Gulf of Mexico, in an attempt to establish a commercial crab fishery. There are no further records of this crab from Florida waters (Park 1969, personal communication from R. P. Hutton to R. M. Ingle, USGS Nonindigenous Species Program 2009).
Invasion History in Hawaii:
Beginning in 1926, in Kanehoe Bay, Oahu, until 1935, 98 Scylla serrata from Samoa were released in Hawaiian waters. All but one of these releases was on Oahu, one was near Hilo, on the island of Hawaii (Brock 1960). By 1940, S. serrata was ascending far up major rivers on Oahu, and by 1960, it was established on all of the main islands of Hawaii, and 'brought a good price in the markets' (Brock 1960, Carlton and Eldredge 2009).
Invasion History Elsewhere in the World:
Two specimens of Scylla serrata were collected in Brazil, one in Santos, Sao Paulo State in 1983 (Melo 1983, cited by Tavares 2011), and one on Sepetiba Bay, Rio de Janeiro, in 2011. These occurrences could be either releases of live seafood or ballast water introductions (Tavares and Medonca 2011).
Description
Scylla serrata is a swimming crab with an oval carapace. The carpace bears four triangular frontal teeth between the eyes and nine anterolateral teeth on each side. The chelipeds (claw-legs) are massive and smooth, and longer than the other legs. The palm of the chela (claw) has two spines on the dorsal margin and two more spines at the insertion of the dactyl (movable finger). The carpus (wrist) bears two prominent spines on the outer margin, and the merus (forearm) bears three large spines on the anterior border and two smaller spines on the posterior border. The legs are stout and moderately compressed, with the 4th pair modified for swimming. The male's abdomen is narrow, with segments 3-5 fused. The female's abdomen is broadly oval. The color of S. serrata is variable, from purple through green and brownish or black. Adult crabs can reach up to 186 mm in size (Keenan et al. 1998).
Taxonomy
Taxonomic Tree
Kingdom: | Animalia | |
Phylum: | Arthropoda | |
Subphylum: | Crustacea | |
Class: | Malacostraca | |
Subclass: | Eumalacostraca | |
Superorder: | Eucarida | |
Order: | Decapoda | |
Suborder: | Pleocyemata | |
Infraorder: | Brachyura | |
Superfamily: | Portunoidea | |
Family: | Portunidae | |
Genus: | Scylla | |
Species: | serrata |
Synonyms
Cancer serratus (Forskål, 1755)
Lupa tranquebarica (H. Milne-Edwards, 1834)
Portunus tranquebaricus (Fabricius, 1798)
Scylla oceanica (Estampador, 1949)
Scylla serrata paramamosain (Estampador, 1949)
Scylla tranquebarica var. oceanica (Dana, 1852)
Potentially Misidentified Species
Ecology
General:
Life History- In crabs of the family Portunidae, the male attends the female before molting, and carries the female around, underneath his carapace. He releases the female, allows her to molt, and then copulates with her, inserting the first pair of pleopods, carrying sperm, into the female's seminal receptacles. The eggs are fertilized internally, and then extruded as a 'sponge' or a mass of eggs brooded between the abdomen and the body (Barnes 1983). The eggs hatch into zoeae, larvae about 1 mm long, armed with long spines, which drift in the plankton. Each zoea molts four to seven times before metamorphosing into a megalopa, which has partially developed legs and prominent eyes. The megalopa is capable of crawling on the bottom and active, directed swimming. It settles and molts into a miniature 'first crab' stage which has all the features of an adult crab (Barnes 1983).
Ecology- In Scylla serrata, the life cycle is typically marked by migration through a range of environments. Mating can occur in brackish habitats, but the female migrates offshore for spawning, where the eggs hatch, and the zoeae develop. The megalopae tend to move up estuaries, a movement continued by the juveniles (Keenan et al. 1998; Eldredge and Smith 2001).
Food:
Crustaceans; Molluscs; Plant Matter; Detritus
Consumers:
fishes, humans
Trophic Status:
Omnivore
OmniHabitats
General Habitat | Grass Bed | None |
General Habitat | Unstructured Bottom | None |
General Habitat | Mangroves | None |
General Habitat | Coral reef | None |
Tidal Range | Subtidal | None |
Vertical Habitat | Epibenthic | None |
Vertical Habitat | Nektonic | None |
Tolerances and Life History Parameters
Minimum Temperature (ºC) | 3 | Islam M.J., and A.L. Bhuiyan, cited by Smithsonian Marine Station 2007 |
Maximum Temperature (ºC) | 45 | Islam M.J., and A.L. Bhuiyan, cited by Smithsonian Marine Station 2007 |
Minimum Salinity (‰) | 1 | Chen and Chia (1997) |
Maximum Salinity (‰) | 42 | Chen and Chia (1997) |
Minimum Reproductive Temperature | 23 | Experimental (Hamasaki 2003) |
Maximum Reproductive Temperature | 32 | Experimental (Hamasaki 2003) |
Minimum Reproductive Salinity | 17.5 | Experimental (Hill 1974) |
Maximum Reproductive Salinity | 35 | Experimental (Hill 1974) |
Minimum Duration | 22 | Experimental, 22 C (Hamasaki 2003) |
Maximum Duration | 43 | Experimental, 22 C (Hamasaki 2003) |
Maximum Width (mm) | 216 | Carlton and Eldredge 2009 |
Broad Temperature Range | None | Warm temperate-Tropical |
Broad Salinity Range | None | Oligohaline-Euhaline |
General Impacts
The one known introduction of Scylla serrata in continental US waters (on the Gulf coast of Florida) was unsuccessful. The stocked population in Hawaii is now abundant and a popular food item. This crab may have ecological impacts as an abundant predator in Hawaiian estuaries, but its impacts are unstudied (Eldredge and Smith 2001).Regional Impacts
SP-XXI | None | Economic Impact | Fisheries | ||
The stocked population of Scylla serrata in Hawaii is now abundant and a popular food item (Carlton and Eldredge 2009). | |||||
HI | Hawaii | Economic Impact | Fisheries | ||
The stocked population of Scylla serrata in Hawaii is now abundant and a popular food item (Carlton and Eldredge 2009). |
Regional Distribution Map
Bioregion | Region Name | Year | Invasion Status | Population Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
EA-IV | None | 0 | Native | Established |
EA-III | None | 0 | Native | Established |
EA-II | None | 0 | Native | Established |
GAden | Gulf of Aden | 0 | Native | Established |
RS-3 | None | 0 | Native | Established |
RS-2 | None | 0 | Native | Established |
RS-1 | None | 0 | Native | Established |
OM | None | 0 | Native | Established |
AG-5 | None | 0 | Native | Established |
AG-4 | None | 0 | Native | Established |
AG-1 | None | 0 | Native | Established |
IP-1 | None | 0 | Native | Established |
CIO-I | None | 0 | Native | Established |
CIO-II | None | 0 | Native | Established |
CIO-V | None | 0 | Native | Established |
CIO-III | None | 0 | Native | Established |
EAS-I | None | 0 | Native | Established |
CIO-IV | None | 0 | Native | Established |
EAS-III | None | 0 | Native | Established |
EAS-VI | None | 2013 | Crypogenic | Established |
EAS-VIII | None | 0 | Native | Established |
EAS-II | None | 0 | Native | Established |
NWP-2 | None | 0 | Native | Established |
AUS-XIV | None | 0 | Native | Established |
AUS-I | None | 0 | Native | Established |
AUS-XII | None | 0 | Native | Established |
AUS-XI | None | 0 | Native | Established |
AUS-X | None | 0 | Native | Established |
AUS-II | None | 0 | Native | Established |
SP-I | None | 0 | Native | Established |
EAS-IV | None | 0 | Native | Established |
SP-IV | None | 0 | Native | Established |
SP-III | None | 0 | Native | Established |
SP-V | None | 0 | Native | Established |
SP-VII | None | 0 | Native | Established |
SP-IX | None | 0 | Native | Established |
SP-XVI | None | 0 | Native | Established |
NZ-IV | None | 0 | Native | Established |
SP-XXI | None | 1926 | Non-native | Established |
EA-V | None | 0 | Native | Established |
SP-XIII | None | 0 | Native | Established |
NWP-3a | None | 0 | Native | Established |
CAR-I | Northern Yucatan, Gulf of Mexico, Florida Straits, to Middle Eastern Florida | 1962 | Non-native | Failed |
G030 | North Ten Thousand Islands | 1962 | Non-native | Failed |
NWP-3b | None | 0 | Native | Established |
WA-V | None | 0 | Native | Established |
SP-XII | None | 0 | Native | Established |
SA-II | None | 1983 | Non-native | Failed |
EAS-VII | None | 0 | Native | Established |
CAR-III | None | 2013 | Non-native | Unknown |
Occurrence Map
OCC_ID | Author | Year | Date | Locality | Status | Latitude | Longitude |
---|
References
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Chen, Jiann-Chu; Chia, Peng-Gek (1997) Osmotic and ionic concentrations of Scylla serrata (Forskal) subjected to different salinity levels, Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology 117A: 239-244
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Lemaitre, Rafael; Campos, Néstor H.; Maestre, Efraín A. Viloria; Windsor, Amanda M. (2013) Discovery of an alien crab, Scylla serrata (Forsskål, 1775) (Crustacea: Decapoda: Portunidae), from the Caribbean coast of Colombia, Bioinvasions Records 2: in press
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