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Cancer productus
Cancer productus
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Cancer productus

Secure  (NatureServe)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Malacostraca
Order: Decapoda
Suborder: Pleocyemata
Infraorder: Brachyura
Family: Cancridae
Genus: Cancer
Species:
C. productus
Binomial name
Cancer productus
Randall, 1839

Cancer productus, one of several species known as red rock crabs,[1] is a crab of the genus Cancer found on the western coast of North America. This species is commonly nicknamed the Pearl of the Pacific Northwest.

Description

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Juveniles may be variously patterned

Cancer productus has carapace teeth that are somewhat broad and rounded with teeth between the eyes of nearly equal size and shape. The carapace of C. productus is widest at the posterior-most tooth, up to 20.0 cm wide. The pincers are large with distinctive black tips. This species lacks serrations or projections on the ventral side of the claws. Adults have a brick-red coloration throughout. The coloration of juveniles is diverse, often white, sometimes with red spots, or zebra-striped.[2]

Similar species

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Dungeness crab (Metacarcinus magister) has serrations on the dorsal side of the chelipeds and lacks black tips. The graceful rock crab (Metacarcinus gracilis) has a single projection on the dorsal side of the chelipeds and also lacks black tips, and the widest point of carapace is at the second posterior-most tooth. The pygmy rock crab (Glebocarcinus oregonensis) has black-tipped chelipeds, but has large tubercles on the dorsum. Glebocarcinus oregonensis is also much smaller, such that a C. productus of similar size would generally have a striking juvenile coloration.[2] Cancer pagurus is very similar, but distinguished by its non-overlapping range.

Range and habitat

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Closeup of a red rock crab

Cancer productus ranges from Kodiak Island, Alaska, to Isla San Martine, Baja California. It inhabits mid-intertidal waters to 79 m depth.[3]

Biology

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Cancer productus is carnivorous; in Puget Sound it will crush barnacles with its large pincers for consumption. Small living crabs and dead fish are also eaten. Mating in this species occurs when the female is soft-shelled from October to June in Puget Sound. The male can often been seen guarding females until molting during this time.[4] This species is known to be a favorite prey item of the giant Pacific octopus, Enteroctopus dofleini.[5]

Fishery

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Cancer productus is harvested by sport and commercial fishermen in California, mostly from Morro Bay south. The California rock crab fishery is made up of three species – the yellow rock crab (C. anthonyi), the brown rock crab (R. antennarium), and the red rock crab (C. productus). Rock crab landings for 1999 were 790,000 pounds and have averaged 1.2 million pounds per year from 1991–1999.[1]

It is not as sought after as Dungeness crab due to the considerably lower amount of flesh. However, the flesh has a delicate flavor and slightly sweet taste. The similar Cancer pagurus has a major commercial fishery in western Europe. Both males and females with a carapace exceeding 5 inches (130 mm) may be harvested in Washington state, when in season.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Cancer productus, commonly known as the red rock , is a of brachyuran in the family Cancridae, characterized by a broadly , brick-red that is wider than long, measuring up to 20 cm in males and 17 cm in females, with a smooth dorsal surface, ten anterolateral teeth, and black-tipped dactyls on the chelipeds. Juveniles often display white or red-and-white stripes on the and legs. Native to the northeastern Pacific Ocean, C. productus ranges from the in to in , , with common occurrences in estuaries such as those in . It inhabits a variety of substrates including rocky tidepools, gravel, boulder fields, eelgrass beds, and soft bottoms in semi-protected coastal areas, from the low to depths of up to 90 meters, where it is often partially buried under rocks or active nocturnally. The species prefers high-salinity environments and cannot osmoregulate effectively in low-salinity conditions, limiting its presence in estuarine shallows during certain seasons; males typically overwinter in shallower waters, while females migrate to deeper areas. Ecologically, C. productus is an aggressive, territorial predator and , preying on over 40 species including , mussels, clams, , snails, worms, small crabs, , and sea cucumbers, thereby playing a key role in structuring nearshore rocky communities. It faces predation from octopuses, such as sculpins and bass, and seabirds, and can be a pest in due to its foraging habits. occurs primarily in summer, with mating shortly after female molting; fertilized females carry large egg clutches ranging from 172,000 to 597,000 eggs, brooding them from December to January until larval hatching in early spring, potentially producing two broods per year. The species often hosts epibionts like and on its .

Taxonomy and nomenclature

Scientific classification

Cancer productus belongs to the kingdom Animalia, phylum Arthropoda, subphylum Crustacea, class , order Decapoda, family Cancridae, genus Cancer, and species C. productus. The species was originally described by John Witmer Randall in 1840 in his Catalogue of the Crustacea brought by Thomas Nuttall and J.K. Townsend, from the West Coast of North America and the Sandwich Islands, based on specimens collected along the Pacific coast of . Within the genus Cancer, which takes its name from the Latin term for "crab," C. productus has retained a stable classification despite past taxonomic uncertainties in the Cancridae family. The specific epithet "productus" derives from the Latin word meaning "produced" or "extended."

Synonyms and common names

The accepted scientific name for this species is Cancer productus Randall, 1840, as recognized by the (WoRMS) and the (ITIS). Historical synonyms include Platycarcinus productus Dana, 1852; Cancer perlatus Stimpson, 1856; and Cancer brewerii Gabb, 1866, all considered junior subjective synonyms due to later taxonomic revisions. These arose primarily from mid-19th-century descriptions of specimens, often juveniles, that appeared distinct from adults, leading to initial placements in separate genera or species within the Decapoda during early explorations of Pacific crustaceans. Common names for Cancer productus include red rock crab (the primary vernacular name), red crab, Pacific rock crab, and red cancer crab. Regional variations, such as North American red rock crab, reflect its prominence along the western North American coast.

Identification

Physical description

_Cancer productus exhibits the typical brachyuran , characterized by a flattened enclosing the , a reduced and ventrally folded , and five pairs of walking legs for locomotion. Males display with asymmetrical chelipeds, where one is significantly larger than the other, adapted for defense and . The walking legs are robust, with dactyls fringed by short setae, aiding in movement over rocky substrates. The carapace is broadly oval and slightly convex, nearly smooth dorsally without prominent tubercles, measuring up to 20 cm in width for males and 17 cm for females, with the widest point at the ninth anterolateral tooth. It features ten anterolateral teeth per side, including the orbital tooth, with the posterior nine being large, acute, and rounded to blunt; additionally, five nearly equal frontal teeth project between the eyes. The chelipeds are large and muscular, robust for crushing prey, with distinctive black tips on the dactyls and tubercles on the propodus often arranged in longitudinal lines. Adult coloration is predominantly brick-red to dark red dorsally, fading to lighter shades ventrally, providing among and rocks. Juveniles display more variable and mottled patterns, such as white backgrounds with red spots, zebra-like red and white stripes, or blotches, which transition to the uniform red of adults as they mature. The legs of both stages are mottled red, enhancing overall in intertidal and subtidal environments.

Similar species

_Cancer productus can be distinguished from the (Metacarcinus magister) primarily by claw and features. The chelae of C. productus have a dark tip on the dactyl, whereas those of M. magister lack this pigmentation and appear white-tipped. Additionally, the of C. productus is widest at the ninth anterolateral tooth and features low, lobed anterolateral teeth, contrasting with the sharper anterolateral teeth and width at the tenth tooth in M. magister. In comparison to the graceful rock crab (Metacarcinus gracilis), C. productus exhibits differences in claw tips and margins. M. gracilis possesses white-tipped chelae similar to M. magister, along with sharp anterolateral teeth and a rounded male , while C. productus has dark-tipped chelae, low and lobed anterolateral teeth, and a pointed male . These traits aid in field separation, particularly in overlapping coastal habitats. The pygmy rock crab (Cancer oregonensis) is markedly smaller, typically under 5 cm in carapace width, compared to C. productus, which reaches up to 20 cm. C. oregonensis also has a nearly square (length approximately equal to width) with granular regions and dense setae on the chelae and legs, whereas C. productus has a wider-than-long that is nearly smooth dorsally with only scattered setae. C. productus shares overlapping ranges with the yellow rock crab (Metacarcinus anthonyi) and brown rock crab (Romaleon antennarium) along the coast, but differs in coloration and texture. M. anthonyi is predominantly yellow with black-tipped chelae, while R. antennarium is brown and features a distinct on the anterior third of the posterolateral margin, along with red spots on the ventral surface—features absent in the red C. productus, which has a smooth posterolateral margin. All three have broadly oval, sawtoothed anterolateral margins and black-tipped claws, emphasizing the need for close examination of color and posterior teeth for accurate identification. Although C. productus is congeneric with the European edible crab (Cancer pagurus), the latter is confined to the Atlantic and Mediterranean, preventing sympatry. Both species attain similar maximum sizes around 20 cm carapace width, but C. pagurus typically exhibits a more robust, ovate carapace with prominent tubercles and five pronounced anterolateral teeth, differing from the broader, smoother form of C. productus.

Distribution and habitat

Geographic range

Cancer productus inhabits the coastal waters of the eastern Pacific, with a distribution extending continuously along the North American west coast from the northern limit near , (approximately 57°N), southward to , (approximately 30°N). This range encompasses key regions including , Washington, , and , where the species is found from intertidal zones to subtidal depths up to 90 m. Populations become sparser toward the southern extent, with limited records beyond Isla San Martín in . Within this latitudinal span (roughly 57°N to 30°N and 152°W to 116°W), the species maintains a stable presence without documented significant range expansions or contractions prior to 2025. However, monitoring efforts in the have highlighted potential vulnerabilities to ocean warming, which could influence southern population limits if temperatures exceed current tolerances in affected areas. Abundance patterns vary across the range, with the densest populations occurring in the Salish Sea and Puget Sound regions of Washington state, where the crab is a common component of nearshore communities. These areas support higher densities due to favorable coastal conditions, contrasting with lower abundances in more southern latitudes.

Preferred habitats

_Cancer productus occupies a range of subtidal and intertidal habitats along the , from the mid-intertidal zone to depths of up to 90 meters, though it is most commonly encountered in shallow waters less than 30 meters deep. This species favors a variety of substrates, including rocky bottoms, beds, coarse , and soft , where it often positions itself half-buried in beneath boulders or in crevices during daylight hours to avoid exposure. In estuarine and coastal environments, C. productus demonstrates tolerance to fluctuating salinities, though its distribution is constrained by low-salinity gradients due to limited osmoregulatory capacity, typically occurring in waters above 21 parts per thousand. The is frequently associated with structured habitats such as kelp beds and rocky reefs, which offer shelter from predators and access to abundant prey resources like mollusks and smaller crustaceans. This species is adapted to cool temperate waters, with preferred temperatures ranging from 8 to 12.1°C, reflecting its prevalence in regions from to where such conditions dominate. Recent physiological studies highlight its sensitivity to extreme temperature shifts, which can impair oxygen uptake and ventilatory performance, potentially affecting survival in warming coastal ecosystems.

Biology

Life cycle and reproduction

The life cycle of Cancer productus begins with , which typically occurs in summer, particularly from June to August in regions like , when females are soft-shelled immediately following their molt. Males employ a precopulatory mate-guarding strategy, clasping and protecting pre-molting females beneath their for 1–4 weeks to ensure paternity, continuing guardianship post-mating until the female's hardens. Fertilization is internal, with males depositing spermatophores that females store for delayed extrusion of egg masses, often 3 months after . Females are iteroparous, producing 1–2 broods annually, primarily over the winter-spring period, each containing 559,000–1,036,000 eggs depending on size (mean ~877,300 eggs per brood for mature individuals). Eggs are brooded externally on the pleopods for 6–9 months until hatching, with ovigerous females observed from to in . The reproductive lifespan averages ~4 years, during which a female may produce cumulatively up to about 7 million eggs across 4–8 broods. Upon hatching, larvae emerge as prezoeae that rapidly molt into planktonic zoeae, progressing through five zoeal stages over a duration of 1–2 months (typically 60–90 days in natural conditions) before metamorphosing into the megalopal stage. Megalopae then settle in nearshore intertidal and subtidal nursery habitats, often from early to early , with settlement patterns strongly influenced by coastal currents and relaxation events that transport larvae shoreward. Post-settlement juveniles undergo frequent molts—up to twice annually—while feeding on small prey to support rapid growth, whereas adults molt less often, typically once per year, rendering them vulnerable to predation immediately after due to soft exoskeletons. Sexual maturity is reached 2–3 years post-settlement, at a width of ~65–100 mm, with males maturing slightly earlier than females. The overall lifespan extends up to 7–10 years, though natural mortality limits many to 5–7 years in the wild.

Feeding and diet

Cancer productus is primarily carnivorous, with a diet dominated by other crustaceans such as and smaller , alongside molluscs, polychaetes, amphipods, sea cucumbers, and various other intertidal ; it also scavenges , with at least 42 prey documented. The red rock crab exhibits prey preferences among similar gastropods, selectively targeting the Nucella lamellosa over sympatric such as N. canaliculata and N. ostrina. It employs its powerful crushing claws to break open hard-shelled prey, including bivalves like clams and mussels. As an opportunistic and active predator, C. productus targets sessile or slow-moving organisms in intertidal and subtidal habitats, often burying itself during the day and more actively at night. This species functions as a mid-level predator in nearshore food webs, hunting macrofauna and occupying an estimated of 3.3 (±0.43). Ontogenetic shifts occur in its diet, with juveniles primarily consuming smaller invertebrates while adults shift toward larger prey, including juvenile Dungeness crabs (Metacarcinus magister).

Behavior and ecology

Cancer productus displays primarily nocturnal activity patterns, emerging from burial sites during nighttime hours to forage and exhibiting peak emergence during nocturnal high tides as part of an endogenous circadian rhythm. During the day, individuals typically bury themselves in sediment or under rocks, remaining inactive for predator avoidance and energy conservation, with burial durations averaging around 8.8 hours but sometimes exceeding 50 hours. This diurnal burial reduces exposure to visual predators, while nocturnal foraging aligns with lower predation risk in intertidal zones. The species generally exhibits low aggression toward conspecifics outside of mating contexts, though agonistic behaviors such as chelae displays occur during resource competition. Movement studies indicate that C. productus does not avoid energized power cables, showing no preference for crossing or bypassing them in experimental setups. In trials, crabs consistently preferred westward travel regardless of cable presence or electromagnetic fields, suggesting inherent directional biases possibly linked to coastal currents or features. Home ranges typically span 50–100 m, allowing limited but targeted mobility within rocky subtidal areas. As a key predator in rocky intertidal communities, C. productus plays a crucial ecological role by controlling populations of sessile such as (Mytilus californianus) and , thereby preventing their dominance and facilitating higher . Field experiments demonstrate that crab predation increases mussel mortality by 43–294 times in uncaged areas compared to exclusions, with crabs consuming mussels at rates far exceeding those of co-occurring sea stars. This top-down control maintains community zonation and supports diverse by reducing competitive exclusion from like mussels. In depleted predator assemblages, such as those affected by , C. productus assumes a keystone-like function in preserving intertidal structure. The primary predator of C. productus is the (Enteroctopus dofleini), which preferentially targets these crabs as prey in subtidal habitats. Occasional predation occurs from seabirds and various fish species, contributing to size-selective mortality in intertidal zones. Intraspecific interactions include , where larger individuals prey on smaller conspecifics, potentially influencing population structure and size segregation in high-density areas. This behavior may regulate recruitment and reduce competition for resources among juveniles.

Human interactions

Fishery and commercial use

The red rock crab, Cancer productus, plays a significant role in the multi-species rock crab fishery along the of , particularly in where it is harvested commercially alongside other rock crab species such as the brown rock crab (Cancer antennarius) and yellow rock crab (Cancer xanthii). Historical landings in California's rock crab fishery, which include C. productus, peaked at 790,000 pounds in 1999 and averaged 1.2 million pounds annually from 1991 to 1999, with much of the catch converted from claw-only harvests to whole-weight equivalents. This fishery has been notable for its contribution to local markets, though it remains smaller in scale compared to the dominant (Metacarcinus magister) fishery in northern regions. As of 2024, the commercial harvest of C. productus continues as part of managed multi-species rock crab fisheries in several states, using limited entry permits and size limits with no formal total allowable catch quotas but ongoing monitoring to ensure sustainability. A 2024 study assessed the feasibility of a claw-only fishery to improve sustainability and market value. In Washington, where C. productus is commonly taken incidentally during Dungeness crab operations, the minimum carapace width for harvest is 5 inches (127 mm), applicable to both sexes in hard-shell condition; recreational harvest has a daily limit of six crabs, while commercial incidental take follows Dungeness fishery rules. Commercial fishing methods mirror those for Dungeness crab, primarily using baited rectangular traps or pots made of welded mesh or collapsible plastic, deployed at depths of 27–73 meters (90–240 feet) on sandy or muddy bottoms. Recreational harvest, popular in intertidal and nearshore zones, employs hand lines, dip nets, or small pots, often targeting C. productus in rocky habitats accessible from shore or docks. Economically, C. productus commands a lower market value than due to its smaller size and tougher shell, which reduces processing efficiency, though it is valued for its sweet meat in local such as steamed dishes and chowders. The is utilized for consumption, particularly claws in specialty markets, and as in other trap fisheries, contributing to its role in supporting regional seafood economies despite limited overall ex-vessel revenues. Regional regulations vary, with imposing a stricter minimum legal width of 115 mm for C. productus to promote stock sustainability, while fisheries in and Washington focus on size limits and gear restrictions without trip quotas.

Conservation status

The red rock crab (Cancer productus) is assessed as globally secure (G5) by NatureServe, indicating a high level of abundance and minimal risk of extirpation across its range. The species has not been evaluated for the , reflecting its lack of inclusion in global threat assessments to date, and it holds no endangered or threatened designations under U.S. federal or state wildlife laws. Although populations remain robust overall, C. productus faces minor threats from anthropogenic activities. poses a localized , particularly in heavily targeted areas like the , where catch-per-unit-effort and male size declined between 2008 and 2017 due to increased fishing pressure, though these impacts vary spatially and do not indicate range-wide collapse. Habitat loss from coastal development, including and in intertidal and subtidal zones, can disrupt rocky reef environments essential for the species, but such effects are limited in scope. exacerbates vulnerabilities through , which alters larval dispersal behavior and reduces settlement success in early life stages, potentially affecting in acidified coastal waters. Management efforts emphasize sustainable practices and monitoring to maintain population health. In California, C. productus is addressed in the 2020 Enhanced Status Report for rock crabs, which evaluates fishery dynamics and recommends adaptive strategies for the multispecies complex. Fisheries in Washington and are regulated under state programs promoting , including size limits, seasonal restrictions, and pot-based harvest guidelines that minimize and support stock resilience. Ongoing monitoring targets interactions with , such as the European green crab (), through trap surveys that track native abundances and potential competitive pressures. trends indicate stability, with no significant range-wide declines observed since 2000 and of resilient . Surveys through 2023, including those by Washington Sea Grant's Crab Team, report consistent presence and abundances in coastal estuaries, particularly in rocky habitats, underscoring the species' adaptability despite localized pressures.

References

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