Boxing Crab -- any idea where to get one?

Abarnswell

New Member
I really want a boxing crab. Does anyone know where I can get one? I've read up on them, etc... but I gather they are difficult to find. According to Saltwaterfish.com, they are easy to care for. I have also read that they are delicate and would do best in a species tank. I would definitely set up a tank of his own, if I could find one. :)
 

drty811

New Member
april,

my LFS has them all the time. i have two in my tank now, and they had babies. i have only noticed a couple of the babies have survived over the last couple months. they like to hide alot, i dont see mine for a couple weeks and then they are both out. i dont do anyhting special for mine, they eat when i feed the tank. sometimes they come out when i feed. love to watch them defend there hole that they live in when someone comes near. greatest addition to my tank IMO.
 

incysor

New Member
I've got two in my 75g, and one in my 6g. Nothing special is required really. They do seem to be pretty shy, so I don't see them much, but it's neat when they do make an appearance.

Mine seem to lose their anemones when they molt. One seems to have managed to keep one, but the others haven't.

B
 

Abarnswell

New Member
Do they do okay if they lose their anenomes? I read that they put them down when they molt, and then they pick them back up afterwards, but that seems kind of risky. It wouldn't be surprising if they lost their anenomes...

I will ask my LFS if they can get one (some). You can keep multiples together?
 

incysor

New Member
All the ones I've seen are pretty small...Between the size of a dime, and a nickel.

Of course that doesn't mean they don't get larger. ;-)

B
 

drty811

New Member
ive had mine for about six seven months now and they really havent got any bigger, and they both have molted about three times. mine are the size of a dime.
 

Abarnswell

New Member
Okay, here is a fabulous video of a 2.5g. nano tank with a Boxing Crab in it (turn on your speakers because this video is accompanied by cool Spanish guitar music):

http://www.zippyvideos.com/862218579125 ... luebastion

I stopped at my LFS today for some supplies, and lo and behold, I found a price sticker for a Pom Pom Crab ($14.98). I have never seen these before at my LFS, but tonight I saw a price sticker, and that means they had one in recently. (Maybe it's still in there and hiding:). So tomorrow morning I am calling the manager to have her order two of them for me. I am going to give them their own tank. I have one that is pretty much unpopulated -- except for two teeny blue-legged hermits and three white-banded cleaner shrimps. I don't think the shrimps would hurt the pom poms -- and my tank is full of little nooks and crannies and caves for the pom poms to hide in (I hear they like to hide). They are small and vulnerable to being picked on by others, so if you keep them (according to one book I read) they are supposed to be pretty much by themselves in a small tank where they can be "pampered."

Here's what the www.petsolutions.com web site says:

Pom Pom Crab, Lybia tessellata, is a curiously comical aquarium addition. This Hawaiian native frequently carries a small anemone in each claw. There are at least two purposes for carrying the anemones. The first is a simple matter of defense. The Pom Pom will taunt would-be predators by shaking the anemones in hopes of stinging the invader into retreat. It also mops the substrate to gather uneaten food, thus creating a symbiotic relationship between the Pom Pom Crab and its pom poms. The anemone undoubtedly benefits by getting to eat its share of the treasure. Also known as the Boxer Crab, it is a hardy creature that grows to about an inch in length. Because of this small size, it is great for the mini-reef aquarium.

Approximate Arrival Size for Pom Pom Crab: .5 to 1 in.

Notes: This species must molt in order to grow. Molting generally occurs at night, when the lobster will lay on its back and exit its exoskeleton. A new exoskeleton is excreted and will harden over a period of several hours. The animal is vulnerable at this time and should not be disturbed. Proper iodine levels assist with successful molting.


Scientific Name Lybia tessellata
Diet Omnivore; Scavenger
Alt Common Name Boxer Crab
Family Xanthidae
Origin Hawaii
Aquarist Level Novice
Reef Safe With Caution (May sting animal and corals with its pom poms)
Coloration White with Red areas outlined in Black. Black banding in legs
Disposition Moderate
Hardiness Very
Mature Size 1 inches
Reproduction Method Females carry eggs on abdomen.
Sexual Dimorphism None visible.
 

Abarnswell

New Member
I just talked to my LFS manager. She told me there is a Pom Pom Crab in their display Nanocube near the sales counter, but it's about the size of a pin head and there's no way to find it or remove it (for selling), not at least until is has grown considerably. She is going to contact her distributor and try to order some larger ones for me.

She also said he has anenomes in his claws. Now where in the world does a crab the size of a pin head get/find anenomes???
 

incysor

New Member
The anemones are the reason they're called pom-pom, or boxing crabs. They wave them at critters that are bothering them. I guess if you ran into the anemone and got stung once you might leave the crab alone the next time.

B

Here's the best pic I've managed to get of mine, since they're shy and tend to stay deep in the rockwork.

 

incysor

New Member
My understanding was that they should pick them back up from the old molt, but one in my 75g lost both anemones, and the other has lost one. They don't seem too bothered by the loss though. I don't have anything in the tank that'll really bother them much. I've got sexy shrimp in there too, and have been careful not to introduce anything that'll hurt them, so the pom-pom crabs are fine even without their anemones.

B
 
Top