Evolution, Insular Restriction, and Extinction of Oceanic Land Crabs, Exemplified by the Loss of an Endemic Geograpsus in the Hawaiian Islands

PLOS ONE
By Gustav Paulay, John Starmer

Most oceanic islands harbor unusual and vulnerable biotas as a result of isolation. As many groups, including dominant competitors and predators, have not naturally reached remote islands, others were less constrained to evolve novel adaptations and invade adaptive zones occupied by other taxa on continents. Land crabs are an excellent example of such ecological release, and some crab lineages made the macro-evolutionary transition from sea to land on islands. Numerous land crabs are restricted to, although widespread among, oceanic islands, where they can be keystone species in coastal forests, occupying guilds filled by vertebrates on continents. In the remote Hawaiian Islands, land crabs are strikingly absent.

Here we show that absence of land crabs in the Hawaiian Islands is the result of extinction, rather than dispersal limitation. Analysis of fossil remains from all major islands show that an endemic Geograpsus was abundant before human colonization, grew larger than any congener, and extended further inland and to higher elevation than other land crabs in Oceania.

Land crabs are major predators of nesting sea birds, invertebrates and plants, affect seed dispersal, control litter decomposition, and are important in nutrient cycling; their removal can lead to large-scale shifts in ecological communities. Although the importance of land crabs is obvious on remote and relatively undisturbed islands, it is less apparent on others, likely because they are decimated by humans and introduced biota. The loss of Geograpsus and potentially other land crabs likely had profound consequences for Hawaiian ecosystems.

Extinct land crab once held isle sway

Hordes of land crabs occupied the Hawaiian Islands until they went extinct after the arrival of Polynesians some 1,000 years ago, says a Florida researcher who describes the species for the first time.

“If these land crabs were alive today, Hawaii would be a very different place,” said researcher Gustav Paulay, with the Florida Museum of Natural History in Gainesville. “They certainly were major ecological players.”

The species was unique to the Hawaiian Islands and was the most land-adapted crab in the Pacific, expanding further inland and to higher elevations than any other, Paulay says in a posting this week on the website PLoS ONE. The omnivores had a body about the size of a large hand and a pair of claws, the right bigger than the left.

Fossils of the species, Geograpsus severnsi, have been found on the major Hawaiian Islands for many years, but its identity was not clear. Researchers identified the crab by comparing physical characteristics with specimens from various collections.

Like other island land crabs, G. severnsi appears to have retained ties to the sea, where its larvae developed, Paulay says.

An analysis of the radiocarbon-dated specimens show they vanished soon after Polynesians colonized the Hawaiian Islands about 1,000 years ago