Growing to Meet the Need
December, 2025
The 10th full season of the flagship monitoring network; a decade since the first confirmed detection of green crab in Washington’s portion of the Salish Sea, the third year of Molt Search, and the 5th annual Trappers’ Summit. For Crab Team, celebrating these weighty milestones enables us to reflect with pride and gratitude on all that has been accomplished as a huge community-fueled engine of green crab science and management.
The recent first detections of green crab in Skagit Bay were a microcosm of all the ways Crab Team has built programs that support statewide management efforts. The first evidence of green crab was found by Shirley Hoh, formerly a volunteer captain of the Kiket Lagoon Crab Team network monitoring site, while conducting Molt Search protocols on her local beach. The collaborative response with WDFW and the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community biologists built on a relationship that supported Crab Team network monitoring at multiple sites on the Swinomish reservation, and the tools, training, and trapping practices honed through experience on shorelines from Drayton Harbor to the mouth of the Columbia River over the last decade. And the tissue samples collected and shared with our geneticist collaborator, Carolyn Tepolt, flag our increasing reliance on genetic monitoring information that was, just eight years ago, only something we could cross our fingers for!
We are extremely grateful for the investment of everyone who has taken a risk with us in the mud – founders and funders alike! As a program, we look forward to continuing to grow with the changing landscape of needs related to green crab management, and we hope you will grow with us.
All our pinchy best,
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Shirley Hoh, current Molt Search participant and former monitoring network volunteer, conducting the first molt survey at Kiket Lagoon in 2016. Photo: E. Grason/WSG

Crab Team Deep Dive: Exploring the Impacts of the 2021 Heat Dome on Salish Sea Pocket Estuaries
A Deep Dive into Shallow Habitats
From day one, Crab Team has been about more than just European green crabs. In addition to conducting efficient early detection monitoring for the global invader, Crab Team is all about getting to know the locals, too – the isolated communities that inhabit pocket estuaries. In addition to being habitats likely to be most impacted by green crabs, pocket estuaries are chronically understudied compared to other iconic marine shorelines like the rocky intertidal. The salt marsh, tidal stream channels, and salty tidal lagoons that comprise pocket estuaries are often geographically small and disconnected from each other. Their isolation and scale could make them more variable and possibly vulnerable to disturbances (including green crab invasion) than larger, more continuous habitat types.

Figure 1 from Rubinoff et al. (2025) showing the Crab Team sites included in the analysis broken down by habitat type. Click to enlarge.
Crab Team monitors have been amassing observations and records of every non-green crab animal in traps for the last decade – and at most sites, the majority of the catch isn’t green crabs. While some might call them “bycatch,” these other local crabs, fish, shrimps, gastropods and even echinoderms (!) are just as important to the core mission of the monitoring network: to track changes in these habitats wrought by green crab AND to evaluate the health of pocket estuaries in their own right.
A new Crab Team paper aimed to do just that, and we’re pleased to share these hot-off-the-[virtual] presses findings. Former Crab Team postdoc, Ben Rubinoff, led the analysis and subsequent paper titled, “High-resolution monitoring of Salish Sea estuarine communities through participatory science” and it appears in the most recent issue of Frontiers in Marine Science.
Getting to Know the Locals
The goal of the investigation was to explore the pocket estuary communities at Crab Team sites that remain relatively less impacted by European green crab, which are those within the Salish Sea, and ask:
- Do these ecological communities vary by the type of habitat? Do lagoons have different or a different number of animals in traps than channels or tidal flats?
- How much do these ecological communities change over time? Do we see any directional changes over the decade of sampling?
- Were these ecological communities impacted by the 2021 “Heat Dome” and, if so, did they recover? Did impacts and recovery differ depending on habitat type?

Live Batillaria attramentaria among eelgrass. Batillaria are more likely to be found in tide flats than channel and lagoon habitats. Click to enlarge.
Given we expect from the outset that each individual pocket estuary likely differs from any other, we would need a very large sample of pocket estuaries to answer these questions. And given that some inherent month-to-month or year-to-year changes are also likely, in order to find any large directional or disturbance-related (e.g., caused by the 2021 Heat Dome) changes, we would also need to track these sites over a long period of time. This sounds like just the job for the Crab Team monitoring network! The Salish Sea portion of the network has 57 sites, monitored monthly since 2015 (minus a few years for some newer sites), stretching broadly over space and now more than a decade.
Who Lives Where?
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Figure 2 from Rubinoff et al. (2025) showing the monthly abundance of key species across the three different habitat types. Click to enlarge.
Crab Team trapping data shows that the three habitat types have different ecological communities, a distinction driven by the consistent differences in abundance of a few key species across habitats.
- Purple shore crabs are most abundant in channels, while graceful crabs are more common on tideflats, and rock crabs and hairy hermits are most abundant in Lagoons.
- Of the fish, the large numbers of stickleback that can be found in lagoons compared to the other two habitats was important to driving the distinction.
- The invasive mud snail, Batillaria is on average six times more numerous in tidal flats than either of the other two habitat types.
- Lagoons, on average, had the most organisms in traps of any of the three habitat types – an average of 315 individuals of all species combined across the six traps per monthly sample.
- The habitat type with the greatest “diversity” depended on how you define diversity, but channels were always considered the lowest diversity sites.
- On average, the greatest number of species was found in Lagoons (least in channels)
- Correcting for the relative abundance of each species, tideflats are actually more diverse than the other two habitat types. This accounts for scenarios where only a single species, let’s say hairy shore crab, just for an example, might comprise the vast majority of all individual animals in a habitat. Intuitively, even if there are more species in such a habitat, the dominance of a single species doesn’t make it feel very diverse.
- The community of animals living in these habitats is highly variable within a season, but this high level of variability is consistent over time. Estuarine communities are inherently dynamic due to the regular changes in environmental conditions – tides, inputs from terrestrial, ocean, and freshwater habitats. While this results in changing communities, and though those communities differ by habitat type, these changes and differences are consistent over time. That is to say they are consistently inconsistent!

Figure 4 from Rubinoff et al. (2025) showing a box plot of the daily maximum temperature in 22 Crab Team sites (15 channel and 7 lagoon) during the 2021 heat dome. Click to enlarge
Where Heat Meets Habitat
The atmospheric heat dome in 2021 did result in warmer water temperatures at sites where Crab Team had temperature loggers, and the heat dome’s impact on water temperature was greatest in channel sites. Channels are more susceptible to changes in air temperatures because, for a given volume of water, these linear features have a greater surface area, meaning more water in contact with the air. We might have expected animal abundance to decline significantly at Crab Team sites if the heat dome had raised water temperatures enough to cause mortalities. However, regardless of habitat type, we didn’t see that happening- we didn’t see a significant decrease in the abundance of the species that commonly appear in traps from May to July of 2021. But looking for a change from May to July in 2021 is only part of the story. Generally, we expect to catch more organisms in July than May of each year, so what if the impact of the heat dome wasn’t a decrease in organisms between those two time periods, but a smaller than usual increase? We tested this by looking at the same May vs. July comparison for all other years in the dataset, but didn’t find any habitats where 2021 stuck out as a particularly “bad” year for any of the species we captured.
This might be occurring because the organisms that we measure in trapping are mobile, so they might already have evolved behavior to cope with temperature extremes, retreating to a shady burrow where the temperature is attenuated by mud, or migrating out with the ebbing tide. Organisms in intertidal environments have already evolved to cope with extreme swings in temperature, salinity, and
even presence of water(!), on hourly time scales. It stands to reason they might be able to withstand short-term, infrequent disturbances like this heat dome – at least on the population level. In support of this possibility was the observation that though water temperatures at sites were higher during the 4-day period of the heat dome than the same 4-day period in other years, nearly all sites experienced temperatures as or more extreme during other times of
year.
However, if the severity, frequency, or duration of these extreme climate events increase, it is possible that this resilience could be pushed past a “tipping point.” This is exactly why Crab Team monitoring matters. Every trap set, every organism recorded, adds to our understanding of how these communities function, and how they might change. The decade of data Crab Team monitors have collected so far has already revealed how resilient these pocket estuaries can be. Now, we continue watching together, not just for the globally invasive green crabs, but for all the locals that call these shallow habitats home.
-Emily Grason and Lisa Watkins
Citation: Rubinoff, B, EW Grason, PS McDonald, L Watkins (2025) High-resolution monitoring of Salish Sea estuarine communities through participatory science. Frontiers in Marine Science. Vol 12. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2025.1584193

Greetings From… Kiana Lodge
Number: 153
Region: Central Puget Sound
Launched: 2017
Team Captain: Jackie McClure
Just beyond the stunning wedding venue Kiana Lodge is a small lagoon frequented by otters and herons and, twice a month, a team of dedicated Crab Teamers, too. The property was purchased by Port Madison Enterprises (Suquamish Tribe) in 2004 on shorelines that have fed the Suquamish for innumerable generations. Gratitude to the Suquamish Tribe for permitting them to monitor such a unique and beautiful site is the first thing Kiana Lodge Crab Teamers mention when describing their experience.
“Crab monitoring at Kiana is always full of surprises,” observes Site Captain Jackie McClure. Even after a monthly guessing game at what their traps will capture, unexpected critters still manage to dazzle the team. The lagoon is one of the most diverse sites in the network, having captured 23 species to date. Traps there regularly capture rock crabs, spider crabs, eel-like fish, and even two different echinoderms– sand dollars and green sea urchins. How they get into traps is a mystery! What’s not a mystery are the significant contributions of the dedicated Crab Teamers at Kiana Lodge and the joy of discovery they bring to this important work.

Natural History Notes: BURR Molts
Phantom of the clawpera … or … Why just a claw?
All crustaceans have to molt, yet not all parts of exoskeletons are created equal. Hermit crab molts aren’t much more than a collection of legs and claws attached to a small carapace. The rest of a hermit crab body doesn’t have to be heavily calcified because their chosen snail shell protects those bits. For burrowing shrimp (BURR for Crab Team purposes, primarily bay ghost shrimp and blue mud shrimp), the sediment that surrounds their burrows protects them, and they are free to live a low-calcium life. To work their burrows though, their claws and legs do need to be hardened. A fresh BURR molt might have a full body, but the thinner bits don’t last long, and their big right claw might be all that weathers the elements. While Crab Team protocols require a carapace for a molt to count, you can certainly make a note if you find these strange claws. The fossil record is also full of them!
More info: Burrowing shrimp are cool, creepy, critical, controversial critters. Read more 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.)














