More underappreciated data!
This is the second blog in our series on underutilized datasets from IEP.
San Francisco Bay Study’s Crab Catch dataset
Curated by Kathy Hieb and Jillian Burns
The San Francisco Bay Study has been sampling with otter trawls and midwater trawls throughout the San Francisco Bay, Suisun Bay, and Delta since 1980. Their fish data have been used in a number of scientific studies, regulatory decisions, and journal articles. However, did you know they measure and count crabs in their nets too?
Bay Study’s stations are all categorized as “Shoal” (shallow areas) or “Channel” (deeper samples). Crabs are collected by otter trawl, which is towed along the bottom of the water, scraping up whatever demersal fishes and invertebrates it comes across. Truth be told, it’s not the best way to catch crabs, because most crabs like hiding under rocks where they are out of the way of the net, but it does give us a metric of status and trends of some of the most common species of crabs, including the Pacific rock crab (Cancer productus), the graceful rock crab (Cancer gracilis, also known as the slender rock crab), the red rock crab, and everyone’s favorite, the Dungeness crab (Metacarcinus magister).
After the net has been towed on the bottom for five minutes, it’s brought on board the boat and the biologists count, measure, and sex the crabs they’ve caught (Figure 1). This can be tricky, because crabs can be FAST! Especially the smaller Dungeness crabs (Figure 2). The biologists have to be careful and pick up the crabs by their back side to avoid getting pinched by their claws, which definitely takes practice.
Once all the crabs are counted and measured, they are entered into a database that goes back to 1980. Bay's Study's Dungeness crab data have been used to help manage the commercial crab fishery because fisheries-independent data is valuable. From 1975 to 1978, an estimated 38-82% of the Dungeness crabs in the central California region rear in the San Francisco Estuary each year (Wilde and Tasto 1983). This dataset was also very helpful in tracking the introduction, expansion, and decline of the Chinese mitten crab (Eriocheir sinensis), which briefly took over the brackish regions of the estuary but declined as rapidly as it arrived (Figure 3. Rudnick et al 2003). Bay Study's crab data has also been combined with other datasets to see how the estuarine community as a whole responds to climate patterns and human impacts (Cloern et al. 2010).
However, a lot of questions remain to be asked of this dataset. Why did we see such high catch of Dungeness crabs in 2013 and 2016? What are the drivers between the lesser-studied crabs, such as the graceful rock crab? How does the salinity preference of each species of crab differ (Figure 4)? If you want to investigate these questions yourself, data are available on the CDFW file library website. But be careful, the data have a few hiccups in them, such as changes to sampling sites over time, missing samples during period of boat break-downs, and other caveats. Be sure to read the metadata and make sure you understand the data before using them.
Further reading
- Baxter, R., K. Hieb, S. Deleon, K. Fleming, and J. Orsi. 1999. Report on the 1980-1995 fish, shrimp and crab sampling in the San Francisco Estuary (PDF), Interagency Ecological Program Technical Report 63. Stockton, California. 503 pages.
- Cloern, J. E., K. A. Hieb, T. Jacobson, B. Sanso, E. Di Lorenzo, M. T. Stacey, J. L. Largier, W. Meiring, W. T. Peterson, T. M. Powell, M. Winder, and A. D. Jassby. 2010. Biological communities in San Francisco Bay track large-sale climate forcing over the North Pacific (PDF). Geophysical Research Letters 37(L21602):6 pages.
- Cloern, J. E., and A. D. Jassby. 2012. Drivers of change in estuarine-coastal ecosystems: Discoveries from four decades of study in San Francisco Bay. Reviews of Geophysics 50(4):RG4001.
- Rudnick, D. A., K. Hieb, K. F. Grimmer, and V. H. Resh. 2003. Patterns and processes of biological invasion: The Chinese mitten crab in San Francisco Bay. Basic and Applied Ecology 4(3):249-262.
- Rudnick, D., T. Veldhuizen, R. Tullis, C. Culver, K. Hieb, and B. Tsukimura. 2005. A life history model for the San Francisco Estuary population of the Chinese mitten crab, Eriocheir sinensis (Decapoda: Grapsoidea). Biological Invasions 7(2):333. doi:
- Rudnick, D. A., K. M. Halat, and V. H. Resh. 2000. Distribution, Ecology and Potential Impacts of the Chinese Mitten Crab (Eriocheir sinensis) in San Francisco Bay. Technical Completion REPORT UCAL-WRC-W-881, University of California.
- Wild, P. W, & Tasto, R. N. (1983). Fish Bulletin 172. Life History, Environment, and Mariculture Studies of the Dungeness Crab, Cancer Magister, With Emphasis on The Central California Fishery Resource. UC San Diego: Library – Scripps Digital Collection.