This guy’s crazier than a coconut.
A
visitor to tropical Christmas Island has had a very close encounter
with a colossal crustacean well known for its thieving tendencies.
Mark
Pierrot was game enough to handle the monstrous coconut crab, known
locally as a “robber crab”, on a recent visit to the small Australian
territory.
Christmas Island hosts more than one million coconut
crabs — the largest land arthropods in the world — keeping locals on
their toes.
“The reason they’re called robber crabs is because
they steal everything,” Christmas Island marketing manager Linda Cash
told AAP.
“If you leave something lying around, you can be pretty sure that a robber crab will take it away.”
Ms
Cash said the crabs, which can grow up to one metre, were known to
steal workers’ tools, including shovels and drills as well as food.
“There’s an urban myth that one actually stole a rifle off some of the defence force personnel on the island,” she said.
There
are 20 species of crab on Christmas Island, 1500km off the West
Australian coast, the most common being the red crab, with an estimated
population of about 40 million.
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