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Masses of bright red land crabs boiling out of their burrows.

Masses of bright red land crabs boiling out of their burrows.
Masses of bright red land crabs boiling out of their burrows.
Masses of bright red land crabs boiling out of their burrows.
Masses of bright red land crabs boiling out of their burrows.
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165781
Gyory, Joanna
Masses of bright red land crabs boiling out of their burrows.
Still Image
04/08/2007
graphics/gyory/IMG_0192.JPG
Submitted by MIT/WHOI Joint Program student Joanna Gyory for the Oceanus article about her work at LJL, Panama.
Image of The Day caption:
After a six-month dry season in coastal Panama, the first rains bring masses of bright red land crabs boiling out of their burrows in the forest and scrambling across the shore to the water, where the females lay fertilized eggs in the sea. The brilliantly colored crabs, Gecarcinus quadratus, are abundant near the Liquid Jungle Lab in Panama, but little was known about them before MIT-WHOI Joint Program student Joanna Gyory discovered how the species completes its life cycle, from eggs, through several stages of marine larvae, to juveniles that migrate back to land, to the land-dwelling adults.
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 48, No. 2, pg. 32:
The rush is on! After the six-month dry season in coastal Panama, the first rains bring masses of bright red land crabs scuttling out of their burrows in the forest and migrating to the shore to lay their eggs in the ocean.
Photo courtesy of Joanna Gyory
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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