Three people in hats and field gear sitting on buckets counting critters in a bin with the Crab Team logo superimposed in the bottom left hand corner

2025 Volume 1

Trap Hard and Trap Smart

June, 2025

This 2025 WSG Crab Team monitoring season will be the official decade mark for 20 additional network sites, and the Molt Search program has surpassed 1,000 surveys. Thinking big and long term are two strengths of the Crab Team program. These are strengths we’ll all need because it seems like green crabs are thinking along the same lines. Across the state, green crab catch rates have ratcheted up higher than ever this spring, and already a number of sites have exceeded captures compared to all of last year. Green crabs have been found at new sites (recent detections include False Bay, San Juan Island and Port Gamble Bay), and using new types of habitat.

The mission has remained constant: Manage green crab populations to protect Washington shorelines as much as possible. There is no shortage of people eager to get out and trap hard for green crabs, to reduce their population and spread. Collectively, trappers are increasingly finding new ways to “trap smart” as well, refining trapping methods to match local and regional goals. The consistency of the Crab Team monitoring protocol enables a robust accounting for changes over time and across the region, enabling management efforts to be responsive to changes over time. It’s the combination of these complementary approaches that are the backbone of Washington’s approach to green crab management.

All our pinchy best,

Crab Team HQ 🦀

Want to receive this newsletter by email?

Sign up here!

Crab Team Deep Dive: Documenting a new shrimp in Washington’s Salish Sea

WSG Crab Team recently shared news of a relatively new unwanted arrival to Washington’s Salish Sea shorelines, and it wasn’t the one you’re probably thinking of. In fact, it wasn’t even a crab at all! Though Crab Team was launched to conduct early detection for the invasion of European green crab into the Salish Sea portion of Washington, monitors across all of Washington’s shorelines faithfully record data on every individual animal in the traps, including fish, snails, native crabs, and even the occasional nudibranch or sand dollar! Because of this data-rich protocol, Crab Team not only detected, but tracked the range expansion of a non-native shrimp that was not much on the radar of researchers or managers in the state – Palaemon macrodactylus. (Etymology note: Palaemon is from the ancient Greek and is likely a reference to mythological sea gods, while “macrodactylus” roughly translates to “big finger” for their claws).

A close up photo of a large hand holding a shrimp with water in the background.

A close photo of Palaemon macrodactylus featuring their namesake giant chelipeds. Photo credit: Sean McDonald

In the summer of 2020, we asked crustacean guru Greg Jensen to provide a species-level identification for an unusual-looking shrimp that we had lumped with the broken-back shrimps (for their humped profile). Dr. Jensen responded that our photo showed Palaemon macrodactylus, a species that he had recorded in Willapa Bay a few decades ago, but wasn’t really considered to be part of the “shrimp scene” in Washington. We cracked open some books, searched the databases, and found that, indeed, the only record of this shrimp in the Salish Sea came from a popular species guide on marine life of the northwest. Lamb and Hanby mention only one occurrence of this shrimp in Boundary Bay. Perhaps, then, it was not a coincidence that the Crab Team shrimp photo we were passing around had come from Drayton Harbor, a stone’s throw away.

It isn’t surprising that Crab team monitors and staff had initially lumped Palaemon macrodactylus with other common species. It turns out “cryptic” invasions, in which non-native species go unnoticed due to misidentification as a native species, are quite common in marine and estuarine environments, especially in organisms like plants and invertebrates, that can be difficult to tell apart with the naked eye. While it’s impossible to know how many of these invasions occur, experts agree they likely have a significant impact on global biodiversity.

In our case, the revelation of a new shrimp started a 4-year project leveraging the Crab Team dataset, monitoring network, and partnerships to dig into everything we could find out about Palaemon macrodactylus, which we like to shorten to the moniker – PAMA (the code we take from the first two letters of the genus and species names). 

  • A picture of a white dish tub with crabs and shrimp in it. A card in the tub says Minnow 3, Site 362, Drayton Harbor, August 12th, 2016.

    This trap photo was part of the time capsule that enabled Crab Team go back and verify that PAMA had been present in traps as early as 2016. See if you can spot the shrimp with the giant claws!

    Crab Team Time Machine: Because Crab Team monitors take photos of every single trap catch, we were able to go back in time, and look at the photo record of every shrimp caught in all previous trapping surveys. We found that about a third of the 152 records of shrimp had in fact been PAMA, going back as early as 2016.

  • Start Spreading the News: We not only started training all Crab Team monitors on ID of this species, we also connected with other trapping partners. Colleagues with WDFW and NWSC working in Whatcom and Skagit Counties then started collecting PAMA records in their own datasets as well.
  • Gotta get ‘em all: To learn as much as possible about these shrimp, we asked Crab Team monitors and partners if they would collect and share any specimens with us. A UW capstone student, Jessica Pineda, completed a project verifying the identification of these shrimp specimens and documenting population demographics, including sex, various size measurements, and ovigery (whether or not they were brooding eggs), on more than 750 specimens!

Map of Crab Team network sites, circles, and other notable detection sites, triangles, for Palaemon macrodactylus. Filled symbols show where this shrimp has been confirmed. Open symbols are sites that have failed to turn up evidence of this shrimp to date. Click to enlarge. Figure from Grason et al. 2025.

Collectively, all of this information gave us an incredibly rich dataset to describe the arrival and spread of PAMA to inland shorelines of Washington. Here is some of what we learned:

PAMA probably arrived in the Washington portion of the Salish Sea at least a few years before we first recorded them in 2016. This is at least true for the northernmost sites where we have documented them (Post Point and Drayton Harbor). It’s not possible to tell exactly when because these shrimp have a relatively short life-span. 

The spread and increase of PAMA over the decade of monitoring demonstrates the species is an ongoing invasion. Year-over-year, PAMA has been found at increasingly southern sites. Additionally at sites where it is consistently found, generally the shrimp has increased in abundance over time. The current-most southern extent is Best Lagoon, in Dyes Inlet.

Trapping probably only detects certain portions of the total population. We tried several different sampling techniques for this shrimp, and found that traps, even minnow traps, only catch the largest individuals, which are most often female. This means that trapping alone doesn’t give us a full picture of the population.

A chart on a white background with multiple colorful lines

Annual Palaemon macrodactylus abundance at Crab Team sites. Click to enlarge. Figure from Grason et al. 2025.

All of this was only possible because of the robust participatory science model of Crab Team. The Crab Team network operates at a scale that wouldn’t be possible without the time and talents of more than 700 individuals over the last decade. Built into the monitoring protocols, both the emphasis on consistency and the verifiable, archivable data enabled the retrospective portion of this study. Crab Team monitors capture photographs of their trap catch, which not only enables the program to verify species identity in real time, but also “back in time” to answer questions we didn’t even know we were going to have when we launched the network. That’s why taking great photos is so important!

While uncovering an invasion that wasn’t even on the radar can feel a bit defeating at times, perhaps it’s helpful to keep in mind that PAMA isn’t known to have large ecological impacts like the invasive species Crab Team is primarily concerned with – European green crab. Researchers have hypothesized that there could be some dietary overlap with crangonid shrimp species, but it’s not clear whether there is much habitat overlap with native crangonids. Nevertheless, one of the lessons that we have to keep learning from biological invasions is that surprises are common. Predictions are difficult, and we’re wrong more often than we’d like to be! Moreover, any species that becomes abundant in a new place has to eat something, and it has to live somewhere. In that way, it is likely that if PAMA becomes abundant, the ecology of certain places will change – even if in subtle ways.

A person with a baseball cap standing in knee deep water looking into a large net

Emily Grason sampling for PAMA at Post Point in 2020 as part of a snapshot effort to investigate their distribution. Photo credit: Sean McDonald

For these reasons, it’s important to be able to detect and track even the invasions that aren’t expected to have substantial impacts. But it’s rare to be able to accomplish this, since limited funding is understandably prioritized for species of highest concern. All too often these species aren’t detected until their abundance is extremely high; thus Crab Team has accomplished a rare feat! The network of Crab Team monitors has provided a very powerful example of how participatory science can meet this need by “Tracking two invasions for the cost of one.”

Emily Grason

Read the full manuscript here: Grason, EW: J Pineda, PS McDonald (2025) Tracking two invasions for the cost of one: opportunistically tracking the range expansion of non-native Palaemon macrodactylus in the Salish Sea through participatory science. Frontiers in Marine Science. Vol. 12. DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2025.1553583

Postcard style image showing people standing in a grassy estuary with misty hills in the background

Greetings From… Washington Harbor

Number: 207

Region: Strait of Juan de Fuca

Launched: 2017

Team Captain: Sue Bonomo 

The dedicated team of monitors at Washington Harbor isn’t afraid to get their hands– and paws– muddy looking for European green crab. Washington Harbor has its very own furry mascot named Yuko, a yellow lab who excels at leaping over the site’s meandering channels, spotting molts, and then rinsing off in the harbor when her work is done! It’s a special place to romp–the largest pocket estuary on the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the site of a significant restoration effort led by Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe, where in 2013 a 600 foot bridge replaced two small culverts to reconnect the marshes with the bay, dramatically improving fish passage and sediment transport in the area.

Team members Sue Bonomo and Shanon Dell have been monitoring the recovery since the start of the site and were joined the following year by Brian Marts and Gail Clark. Their full team of four (plus Yuko!) has been on-site together nearly every month, including throughout the pandemic-challenged monitoring season of 2020. We are grateful to the Washington Harbor team and Yuko for their years of un-fur-gettable dedication to the program!

Text "Natural History Notes" on the cover of a black and white composition notebook with shore crabs on it

Natural History Notes: HEOR Tufts

What are those blobby things on shore crab claws?

You may have occasionally noticed fleshy blobs on the inside of shore crab claws. They are most evident on males, which have larger claws than females. In fact these are tufts of setae, or fine hair-like structures, that emerge from the shell near the claw joint. The best way to get a good view of the structure is to get the claw in water and take a close look. The use of these is not well understood. They are most prominent in males, suggesting they might play a role in reproduction. These setae have chemosensory or smelling receptors at their base. Could these tufts help males locate females that are ready to molt and mate?

More info: Setae are important for all sorts of crab things. Read more about them in our previous newsletter article.

Photo Gallery

We love to get the virtual experience of monitoring with all of the Crab Team volunteers. Do you have a photo to share? Send it to crabteam@uw.edu. (Click on arrows to scroll, and photos to enlarge for more detail.)