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Creation 15(1):44–45, December 1992

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The robber crab

Part of the great crustacean mystery

by Robert Doolan

Max HeadRobberCrab-sml
What could a huge crab be doing up a tree? If it's a robber crab, as this one is, it's about to steal some fruit. Robber crabs particularly like coconuts, but this one on Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean is about to make a meal of some pawpaws. Click for larger view.

Did you hear about the crab that climbs trees at night to steal coconuts? It’s no joke. If you visit Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean, or some other south-west Pacific and Indian Ocean islands, you can see the robber crab in action.

The robber crab, Birgus latro, is the world’s largest land crab. It can grow to 60 cm (2 ft) or more from head to tail. It sneaks out of its burrow at night, climbs the trunks of coconut palms or other fruit trees, and snips off the coconuts or fruit with its two giant pincers. It climbs back down the tree and gathers up the food it dropped for a tasty salad. It uses its huge pincers to chip at and pound the coconuts until it gets them open.

The robber crab is one of about 39,000 known species of creatures called crustaceans. Other crustaceans include shrimps, barnacles, lobsters, fish lice, and a vast assortment of forms without popular names. Water fleas and some other crustaceans are so small they could hide behind the dot at the end of this sentence.

One of the most intriguing facts about crustaceans, as far as creationists are concerned, is not that they can climb trees, break open coconuts, or hide behind a dot on this page. No, the most intriguing thing to creationists about them is that evolutionists have no idea how crustaceans could have evolved. They don’t even know how crustaceans are related to one another within their evolutionary framework.

You see, if you believe that evolution has taken place, you will certainly believe that all those crustaceans must have evolved from some common ancestor in the ancient past. So you will look for this ancestor in two possible areas.

First, you compare crustacean anatomy and try to find a hypothetical ancestor that might have given rise to the enormously varied living and fossil crustaceans. But you soon find that this hypothetical ‘ancestor’ exists only in your imagination.1

Second, you look at the fossil record. But here too you draw a blank. An edition of Encyclopaedia Britannica admits, “The fossil record, although fairly rich, has not solved any of the questions about the early evolution of the Crustacea.”2

There is not even agreement among evolutionists on how crustaceans should be classified. There is even less agreement on the alleged evolutionary interrelationship among the various groups.

The great crustacean mystery is not unique among evolutionary problems. The fact is that no indisputable evolutionary ancestor has been found for any of the major groups of animals. There is not a scrap of evidence to show that the creation of animals as described in the Book of Genesis is not correct.

So why hang on to the theory of evolution if it has no indisputable support from either science or Scripture?

Well, that’s an even bigger mystery.

Posted on homepage: 16 May 2018

References

  1. ‘Crustaceans’, Encyclopaedia Britannica. Encyclopaedia Britannica. Inc., Chicago, Vol. 16, p. 844, 1992. Return to text.
  2. Ref. 1., p. 845. Return to text.

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