登陆注册
46303100000065

第65章 CRABS

On the sea-shores of all parts of the world live crabs of many kinds, more or less akin to each other; and some of these are amongst the most interesting and most crafty of creatures.

Perhaps the most popular of all, because it is at once widespread and curious, is the hermit crab.

Nearly all crabs have a fairly complete outfit of scaly armour, which is an excellent defence, though they have to change it from time to time. The hermit crab, however, is not so well protected.

It has a breastplate and head-piece of armour, but its hind part is soft and without defence, and it would be a dainty meal for many more powerful creatures if the crab were not clever enough to provide a defence for it, for crabs cannot seek safety in swift flight.

What, then, does the hermit crab do? It sets out to find more protection than Nature has given it. When it is young and inexperienced, it usually selects an empty shell on the beach, from which the original tenant has departed. Into this shell, after a critical examination from all points of view, it gets backwards, adapting its soft parts to the shapeof the shell.

The claws and front of the creature remain outside the shell, but the other parts, and the tail, adhere tightly to the shell by a sucker arrangement, so that you cannot"Into this shell it gets backwards. "

drag the crab out. Then, wherever the crab goes, it carries off the protective shell as if it were a part of itself.

All goes well for a time; but, of course, the crab grows, so that presently it gets too big for its shell and has to look out for one more suited to its age and size. Then it renews the search, and now our crab, with experience and confidence, will attack another crab inhabiting a shell which looks very desirable, and a fight will often follow to decide whether the present owner of the shell shall retain it or be dragged out and eaten by the victor. A greedy creature is the crab, eating anything he can find that is dead, or anything alive that he can master.

But the hermit crab is a great bully unless he is boldly tackled. Often he is called the soldier crab, probably from his readiness to do battle with his rivals, but perhaps because, like a soldier on the march, he has a way of carrying all his kit with him as he moves from place to place. Though fond of fighting, if he finds he has run up against a stronger resistance than he expected, he will not hesitate to scuttle off and seek safety in flight. If unexpected forms of danger surprise him, he shrinks as far as possible into his shell, squatting motionless as if dead, and closing the entrance into the shell with his tightly-clasped claws.

When looking for a new home, the crab goes about without his protecting shell; but, if danger threatens, he scuttles back to his old fortress. Usually, when he is foraging and not flitting from shell to shell, he takes his artificial protection with him. His method of progress is to hook on to something with his big claws, and then drag the shell with him in a snail-like movement, taking care not to expose any of his soft parts to view.

The romance of the hermit crab is far from being all told yet. Not only does he live in a borrowed and portable house, but he has a friend with him as a lodger. They share the home together, and each contributes something to the comfort of the other. This lodger is not another crab, but a sea anemone, which settles on the shell and remains there aslong as the crab lives inside. The advantage to the anemone"A sea anemone settles on the shell."

is that it is carried about by the crab, and so has far better opportunities of finding food than it would have if it were fixed to a rock; and the advantage to the crab is that the anemone is provided with stinging cells which keep off intruders, so that by sticking on the shell inhabited by the crab it acts as a very useful defence.

Sometimes inside the shell a kind of worm nestles with thecrab-a third inhabitant. What its use is to the crab no one can say, but the crab"s use to it has been observed, for, whenever the crab finds food, the worm has been noticed to protrude its head from its place of retreat and claim its share of the plunder. This kind of friendly partnership is common among creatures of quite different orders of being.

One species of the hermit crab carries a special anemone which spreads itself all over the shell in which the crab has inserted the back of his body, and also over the crab itself. When the crab has grown too large for the shell and must change to a larger shell, so much does he appreciate the shelter afforded by the anemone that he actually strips his comrade from the shell and takes it with him to his new home. What is even more remarkable still is the fact that the anemone, which ordinarily cannot be torn from the shell, does not resist the crab"s effort to remove it, but relaxes its hold as if to help. Having loosened the anemone from the shell, the crab carries it to his new home, and presses it gently against the shell till it has securely attached itself again.

In some countries, as in Jamaica, the hermit crab goes miles ashore into wet or marshy places, and can climb bushes and trees as easily as a mouse. It is very strange, when you are walking through the tangled undergrowth of tropical Jamaica, to look up and see a crab calmly walking along the branches overhead. This crab, often called a soldier, burrows holes in soft, damp ground, and there seeks safety whenever he fancies danger threatens him. Manyof the houses of Jamaica are built over such ground, on wooden or cement piles some feet from the ground, and in the ground underneath them the crabs find a favourite site for their burrows, so that it is not unusual to hear it said that there are soldiers under the house.

Perhaps the most famous of the crab family is the robber crab-an immense fellow, often over a foot long, found in the Pacific and Indian Oceans where the coconut palm grows. He has given up the habit of seeking security in a shell that did not belong to him, and now he grows his own shell over the sensitive part of his body. The reports that this great crab climbed up trees and flung down coconuts, which he proceeded to open by hammering on the eye-hole of the nut, were long dismissed as travellers" tales; but the tales were true; and methods have to be adopted to protect the fruit from the bold robber. It is found that a band of polished tin wrapped round the tree trunks a few feet above the ground is so slippery that neither the robber crab nor the rat, which also is a great nut thief, can mount the tree.

Another kind of crab, known as the sea spider, has equally curious habits. He goes about with a kitchen garden-or should we say a larder?-on his back. As he crawls about on the floor of the sea, he deliberately picks up with his pincers sponges, sea anemones, alg?, and small worms, and sticks them on his shelly back, which is covered with teeth and spines and wrinkles to which all these things adhere. Of course, he carries these lazy creatures on his back to pastures new, where theyfind fresh food, and in return they hide him from his foes, for by the time he has finished his collection the spider crab is quite concealed by the creatures on his back. But concealment is not the only advantage the spider crab gains from the collection on his back. It serves also as a portable larder. When the crab is hungry, he simply "puts in his thumb and pulls out a plum, " as Jack Horner did. As the creatures on his back have been taken where they have plenty of food, they thrive and multiply, and so the crab can feed according to his fancy from his larder, which is rapidly replenished.

A particularly crafty crab is one found in the Indian Ocean near the Seychelles Islands. He does not carry burdens on his back, but he carries an anemone on each of his claws. When the claws seize some animal the crab desires to eat, the anemones on the claws sting the wounded creature and so help the crab to overpower it. If the anemone be pulled off the claw of a crab, the crab hunts for the anemone, and again attaches it to the claw; and, if the anemone is cut in pieces, the crab carefully collects all the pieces, as if he were aware of the fact that even a small piece of sea anemone will grow into a complete specimen.

It may be thought that the crab is a selfish creature, using his cunning for his own advantage and against other forms of life; but he has many enemies that would eat him, and has need for all the wiles he has developed. The cod is one of the crab"s most successful enemies, and the hideous octopus regards him as the choicest product of the sea. It is not without a good cause,then, that the crab has learned that wisdom for him must mean concealment, as his worst enemies are very much swifter and stronger than he.

From My Magazine

Author.-My Magazine is edited by Arthur Mee, a living English journa- list. He has edited also the famous Children"s Encyclop?diu and The Chil- dren"s Bible.

How many species of crabs are mentioned? What have they in com- mon? How do they differ? After reading the lesson, tell the life-history of a crab. Tell any story of crabs you have seen. Look for Jamaica and the Seychelles on the map. What has made the crab so " crabby " (see last paragraph)? Argue the proposition that a crab has a right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Is this true of all animals?

同类推荐
  • CountrysideofChina

    CountrysideofChina

    ChinahasavaStterritoryandlonghistorywithgreatdifferencesinnaturalConditionsamongdifierentareasofthecountry.Thebookprovidesadetaileddeionof34selectedvillagesinordertoshowthenaturalandSocialphenomenaofthecountrysideinChina.
  • 考研英语词汇词根词缀高效记忆:轻松背单词

    考研英语词汇词根词缀高效记忆:轻松背单词

    书中所收录的单词都是从历届研究生英语考试题中提炼出来的。编者利用先进的电脑统计分析技术,对历年考试题中出现的单词进行系统的电脑分频,将历年考题中出现频率较高的单词甄选出来,标注为常考单词。考题中出现频率较低的,但是考试范围内的单词,标注为普通单词。极大地方便了考生有的放矢地去背单词。
  • 黑暗的心(双语译林)

    黑暗的心(双语译林)

    《黑暗的心》是英国作家约瑟夫·康拉德德代表作,围绕海员马洛讲述的他早年在非洲刚果河流域行船时的一段经历展开故事。讲述的核心是一个叫库尔茨的白人殖民者的故事,一个矢志将“文明进步”带入野蛮的非洲的理想主义者如何堕落成贪婪的殖民者的故事。在接近库尔茨的过程中,作者借马洛之口向我们描述了一副令人感到压抑的浓墨重彩的非洲大陆腹地的图景。
  • 美国名家短篇小说赏析:高级

    美国名家短篇小说赏析:高级

    本书精选了八位美国文学巨匠的8篇美国短篇小说的精华之作,每篇文章前有简短的引言,文中还附有编者的评注和分析及作者简介。
  • 美丽英文:那一年,我们一起毕业

    美丽英文:那一年,我们一起毕业

    正是每天上演的一幕幕小事让生活如此多姿多彩,正是曾经拥有的一丝丝回忆让生命如此精彩纷呈。校园时代的记忆、毕业季的感悟、成长期的困惑以及对生命的种种沉思,尽在这本精彩的小书中。让我们从这些佳作中一起学习优美的英文,感受译文的魅力,懂得在珍惜当下的同时,对过去抱有感激,不抱怨、不气馁,一路勇敢地前行。
热门推荐
  • 原来我爱的是源

    原来我爱的是源

    这部小说有一些虐文所以请不要介意,作者我第一次写小说希望大家不要介意。
  • 晴天的小溪

    晴天的小溪

    这是一个名叫晴天的小女孩,六年级以前的故事。
  • 终极之我是神的存在

    终极之我是神的存在

    当人类挣脱地心的引力,冲破大气层,开始翱游太空,惊讶发现他们想象的九重天里,并没有凌霄宝殿后,地界的信徒们就越来越不相信神的存在了。他们愚昧的脑袋又怎么会明白,九重天其实是另外一个属于神的层次存在呢?信徒的锐减造成的影响就是,下界供奉的灵力越来越少,这些灵力是通过人类大脑虔诚的意念产生的力量,我们神就是通过接收了这种力量才变得强大。没有灵力,我们神最终便会消失。
  • 宇宙天庭

    宇宙天庭

    我有封神榜册封众神,我有生死簿掌控宇宙生灵生死,我要整个宇宙都在我的掌控之下,我是天庭之主天帝,同时也要成为整个宇宙的无上帝王。求收藏,求推荐啊,大家看完书就动手推荐啊,你们的微微一动手,就是本书的前途啊!
  • 半面战神

    半面战神

    他,一位为了复仇重生的末代剑仙那年,他身席白袍,只身傲世天地如今,他隐匿容颜,化身重生战神半面医圣,半面死神,何人可捉摸
  • 时光它都知道

    时光它都知道

    他是星光大学公认的“完美”男神长着一张冰山脸她是一个不起眼的学生在一次阴差阳错的机会下她认识了他在一次受伤的时候顾轩救了林晨曦林晨曦从此成了全校的“敌人”在一次次吵架中他慢慢对她产生了好感便开启了追妻之路在他不懈努力之下终于追到了因为一个不得已的原因他们分开了在三年之后他们在次相遇……【我有多爱你,时光它都知道】
  • 双境界

    双境界

    如果说有一天,你突然发现,你的梦并不都是毫无意义的,可能是与你并行的另一种生活,同一时间拥有两种人生,偶尔可能需要组队打怪,还有一只会说话嗜咖啡有仙法的美颜小男狐保驾护航,你信吗?
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 都市之极道剑仙

    都市之极道剑仙

    气血纯阳,剑道无极。一剑起,万法灭。乘风御剑来,逍遥天地之间,岂不快哉!这是一个无敌强者的故事,也是一个逍遥剑仙的故事!
  • 吴世勋之你懂我爱你

    吴世勋之你懂我爱你

    当我遇见你,心花怒放;当你遇见我,微笑点头;当我回首的时候,你微笑等我。有你真好……