Tuesday, October 14, 2025

fiddler crabs’ courtship drum solos : Brief Wave : NPR

The European fiddler crab (Aphruca Tangier) lives alongside the Atlantic coast, from Portugal in southwestern Europe to Angola in western Africa. Male crabs have one small claw and one large claw that they use of their dances to draw a mate.

Valter Jacinto/Getty Pictures


disguise caption

toggle caption

Valter Jacinto/Getty Pictures


The European fiddler crab (Aphruca Tangier) lives alongside the Atlantic coast, from Portugal in southwestern Europe to Angola in western Africa. Male crabs have one small claw and one large claw that they use of their dances to draw a mate.

Valter Jacinto/Getty Pictures

The male European fiddler crab attracts his mate by performing a courtship dance. New analysis says that dance is not simply notable for its visuals — it is notable for its vibrations, too.

Throughout courtship, the male crab waves his main claw up and down, drumming on the sand till females strategy. This works even at midnight. So, researchers imagine that the way in which the crabs’ drumming strikes by way of the sand is vital to the method.

Utilizing geophones, which sense and file the crabs’ seismic vibrations, researchers from the College of Oxford have been capable of eavesdrop on these percussive love songs. They realized that the vibrations have been created by plenty of completely different behaviors, not simply the claw drumming.

“It was issues like bouncing on their legs, it was concurrently crushing their claw and their physique into the sand,” says Beth Mortimer, one of many examine authors and an affiliate professor of biology on the College of Oxford. “It was much more advanced than we anticipated getting in.”

Altogether, researchers noticed 4 completely different levels of the courtship dance, with every stage escalating the quantity of vibrational output generated.

First, the male crab waves his claw within the air. Second, he alternates waving and dropping his physique into the sand. Then, he concurrently waves and drops his physique, making a extra sustained thumping noise. And at last, if all that’s profitable and the feminine fiddler crab approaches, he begins drumming underground.

“Visually they cannot be seen both by us or the females, nevertheless it does have a really, very sturdy seismic element,” Mortimer says. “It is ‘come and discover me in my underground home, women.'”

Considering extra seismic vibration communication? Ship us an electronic mail at shortwave@npr.org.

Pay attention to each episode of Brief Wave sponsor-free and help our work at NPR by signing up for Brief Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Take heed to Brief Wave on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

This episode was produced by Hannah Chinn and Kathryn Fink. It was edited by Patrick Jarenwattananon. Tyler Jones checked the information.

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest Articles