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Looks a bit hairy.
Definitely not a Trapezia sp. “Acro Crab”
Just a random Gorilla crab, I would toss in the sump.
When you say it showed up with the acro, was it a wild acro colony that came with the crab? Or just a random crab from a live rock
Gorilla crab. It’s already eating that coral. I’d get it out.
The crab may be a Cymo sp. such as Cymo melanodactylus - they're obligate commensals with Acropora corals, and their relationship with them seems a bit mixed; they reportedly do very, very little damage to the coral, and they seem to help keep the corals healthy if the coral is diseased.
That said, there are also reports like the one linked below where the crabs may be responsible for killing coral colonies.
However, the corals dying may have been caused by a few separate things:
-Overpopulation of crabs
-Disease
-Bleaching
-Etc.
If the corals were dying for reasons unrelated to the crabs, however, then the crabs may have been trying to protect the healthy colonies by consuming the sick/dying ones.
So, the crab is essentially typically a beneficial parasite; if the coral is small or struggling in your tank, then the crab could very well kill it, but if it's large and doing well, it should be fine to keep.
That was my first guess but its a relatively small colony and the leg hes sitting on died so hes in the sumpCymo melanodactylus:
very interesting! Thanks for the read. Another SPS commensal crab I did not know about.Cymo melanodactylus:
Probably a smart move. The article states they are only found on injured corals.That was my first guess but its a relatively small colony and the leg hes sitting on died so hes in the sump
Yeah, if the colony isn't able to support it while staying healthy, sumping it is a good choice.That was my first guess but its a relatively small colony and the leg hes sitting on died so hes in the sump