Blue Crab
Blue crabs are a keystone species because they serve as both predator and prey in the Chesapeake Bay food web.
There's nothing more “Chesapeake” than the Bay's signature crustacean, the blue crab. Callinectes (“beautiful swimmer”) sapidus (“savory”), a member of the swimming crab family, is an aggressive, bottom-dwelling predator and a keystone species in the Chesapeake Bay food web. Blue crabs also make up the most productive commercial and recreational fisheries in the Bay.
Blue Crabs Are an Integral Link in the Bay Food Web
Blue crabs serve as both predator and prey in the Bay's food web.
- Blue crabs are prey for fish, birds — even other blue crabs! Soft-shelled crabs that have recently molted are especially vulnerable to predators.
- Predatory fish like striped bass, as well as drums, eels, catfish, cownose rays and some sharks, rely on juvenile blue crabs as part of their diet.
- Blue crab larvae are part of the planktonic community and are fed on by filter feeders such as oysters, menhaden, bay anchovies and juveniles of other fish species.
- Bottom-dwelling blue crabs are among the chief consumers of the benthos. They feed on thin-shelled bivalves, other crustaceans, fish, marine worms, plants, detritus and nearly anything else they can find.
- Blue crabs enhance salt marsh communities by feeding on marsh periwinkles.
Blue Crabs Are Economically Important
During the past 60 years, blue crabs — along with Atlantic menhaden — have dominated the Bay's commercial fisheries.
- It is estimated that more than one-third of the nation's catch of blue crabs come from the Chesapeake Bay.
- Blue crabs have the highest value of any Chesapeake Bay commercial fishery. The Chesapeake Bay commercial blue crab harvest in 2000 was valued at approximately $55 million.
Blue crabs also support a major recreational fishery in the Bay.
- Blue Crab Online Resource: Learn more about blue crab anatomy, migration, life cycles and their role in the Bay food web from the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center.
- The Blue Crab Education Page: Facts, photos and links about blue crabs from the Virginia Sea Grant Program at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science.
- Chesapeake Bay Life > Benthos > Blue Crab: Information on blue crab predators, prey and other aspects of blue crab life from the Maryland Department of Natural Resources.