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Environment
AsiaSouth Asia

These crabs can grow up to a metre long, climb trees and hunt birds, biologist’s video shows

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A coconut crab attacking a bird. Photo: YouTube
The Washington Post

There’s a theory that giant crabs overwhelmed Amelia Earhart, dismembered her and carried her bones underground.

Speculative, at best. Sounds crazy, we know.

But so has almost every other horrifying rumour about the so-called coconut crabs – until science inevitably proves them true.

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They grow to the size of dogs. They climb trees and tear through solid matter with claws nearly as strong as a lion’s jaws.

And now, finally, we have video evidence that the crabs – thousands strong on one island – can scale trees and hunt full-grown birds in their nests.

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“It would at first be thought quite impossible for a crab to open a strong cocoa-nut,” Charles Darwin once wrote, as that father of evolutionary biology recounted stories of a “monstrous” arthropod said to roam an island in the Indian Ocean.

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