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UNH doctoral student Kelsey Meyer with large male blue crab in Great Bay Estuary. Courtesy photo University of New Hampshire |
Researchers at the University of New Hampshire have documented the first discovery of a pair of recently mated blue crabs in Great Bay Estuary (GBE), a finding that is expected to have serious impacts on the estuary’s ecosystem, particularly its fragile oyster population. Blue crabs have been captured in GBE since 2012 but this is the first-time researchers have found compelling evidence that the crabs are actually mating.
“The arrival of blue crabs capable of creating a sustained population poses a new threat to oysters and other native GBE species,” said Bonnie Brown, professor, and chair of the department of biological sciences.
Doctoral student Alyssa Stasse and technician Emily Williams were checking traps set out by doctoral student Kelsey Meyer, who is monitoring the estuary’s invasive green crab population, when they found the two blue crabs and the mating proof: the female, which had recently molted, had distended turgid seminal receptacles with large sperm plugs, clear evidence of crustacean copulation.