Description
This crab grows to a width of about . The body is fan-shaped and theDistribution
''Charybdis feriata'' is native to the tropical and subtropical western Indo-Pacific region. Its range extends from East Africa, the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf to Japan, Indonesia and Australia. It is uncommon in Australia but is harvested commercially in parts of its range such as India. In February 2022, a female specimen was caught by some fishermen off the Genoese coast, in the area in front of the Lanterna, at a depth of about 50 meters using a lobster trammel net. Reported to the "DISTAV Fishing Biology Laboratory" of the University of Genoa, the specimen is transported to the Mediterranean department of the Genoa Aquarium, to be transferred to the curatorial tanks and to observe its behavior. This was not the first report of sighting or capture of this species of crab in the Mediterranean Sea, it had already been reported for the first time in 2004 in Spain, in the seas of Barcelona, the second in Livorno in 2015 and the third still in Spain, near Tarragona in 2017.Ecology
''Charybdis feriata'' inhabits shallow water, on both rocks and sandy bottoms. Mating takes place between a hard-shelled male crab and a soft-shelled, freshly-moulted female crab. The male takes up a guarding "cradle" position before the female moults, straddling her and gripping her with his ambulatory legs. He dismounts while she is moulting, helping her to detach the old shell, before adopting the cradle position once more. Copulation is initiated a few hours later; the male turns the female over with his chelipeds and walking legs. She then positions herself underneath him, but facing in the opposite direction, with her abdomen extended and he inserts his gonopods into her genital openings. This position is maintained for about seven hours, during which time the male may walk around with the female attached. Afterwards the male adopts the cradle position again for a few hours, while she remains inactive until her shell has hardened. Spawning takes place about 17 days later, and as is the case with other crabs, the female carries the fertilised eggs under her abdomen.References
{{Taxonbar, from=Q6618526 Portunoidea Crustaceans described in 1758 Taxa named by Carl Linnaeus