Ocean
Watch
Friday, October 25, 2002
Snapping shrimp are
an earful of activity
Sometimes, when my phones won't stop ringing, the leaf
blowers are roaring and practically everyone I know needs a ride to the
airport, I pack up my laptop and go hide on my sailboat in the Ala Wai
Boat Harbor.
Below deck is another world. The boat rocks gently in
its slip like a cradle, the water laps the hull -- and the shrimp wage
war.
Well, that's what it sounds like some days. What the
heck is going on down there, I sometimes wonder, to get those little guys
so excited?
The underwater snap, crackle and pop sounds we commonly
hear throughout the tropics are made by little shrimp bearing one enlarged
front claw, which the shrimp can cock open. When the creature snaps the
claw shut, it makes a loud popping noise and creates a little shock wave
in the water.
Members of this large family are known as snapping
shrimp or pistol shrimp. They grow from 1 to 2 inches long and snap for
several reasons.
One is for food. In some species, the shock wave
produced by the fast claw closure stuns plankton and passing fish. Other
types of snapping shrimp crack small clams with their big claw.
Another reason shrimp snap is the same reason we humans
sometimes snap: It's a warning to others to back off. Snapping both
defines and maintains a shrimp's territory.
Snapping shrimp live in a wide variety of habitats in
Hawaii and throughout the tropics.
Some live under rocks and rubble from the shoreline to
about 40 feet deep. Another type, bright orange, lives in the spaces
between the branches of cauliflower coral.
One species, called the petroglyph shrimp, makes
branched channels up to 10 inches long on the surfaces of coral heads.
These dark fissures resemble ancient Hawaiian petroglyphs and are easy to
spot in places with large growths of encrusting corals.
A good place to see petroglyph shrimp homes is outside
the reef at Hanauma Bay. Look carefully in the fissures and you will see
clusters of tiny hydroids (jellyfish relatives) lining the edges of the
burrows like armed guards. You will not, however, see the shrimp. Besides
being almost colorless, they stay deep within the burrows where they farm
and eat algae.
Pairs of male and female petroglyph shrimp excavate
their burrows together but don't live together. The male has his own home,
the female hers.
No one knows how these shrimp create furrows in coral,
but some researchers believe it may be a chemical process.
Another interesting snapping shrimp shares a burrow
with a small fish called a shrimp goby. The nearly blind shrimp excavates
and expands passages in the burrow while the keen-sighted goby keeps
watch.
You can see these busy shrimp pushing sand out of their
tunnels like bulldozers while their gobies stands guard. The shrimp keeps
tabs on outside happenings by holding one antenna in contact with its
sentry's tail fin. When danger draws near, the fish twitches its tail and
both creatures dart into the hole.
I don't know why snapping shrimp are sometimes subdued
and other times go off like a popcorn factory. But I don't mind their
noise. That kind of commotion, I enjoy. |