The population of green crabs in Coos Bay has been rising ever since strong ocean currents have been bringing more crab larvae north from San Francisco. This began with the weather pattern El Nino in 2016.
Green crabs are an invasive species that eat eelgrass, an important seagrass that provides shelter and food to many species. They also take over habitat used by young Dungeness crabs and leave them vulnerable to predators.
Shon Schooler is the lead scientist at the South Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve. He says green crabs will eat pretty much anything that they can find.
鈥淲e know from studies on the East Coast that they鈥檒l eat bivalves or shellfish,鈥 says Schooler. 鈥淚n fact, they destroyed the softshell clam industry up in Maine on the East Coast simply by eating too many of them.鈥
Researchers in Coos Bay are asking people to catch green crab, in order to control their population. They have even released a culinary guide to eating these crustaceans.
鈥淭hey are delicious crabs, I have heard from many sources,鈥 says Schooler. 鈥淏ut we don't think of them as food out here yet because they are pretty new. So we thought, why not put out a culinary guide this year and suggest, now that the numbers are high enough, that people can go out and capture them themselves and eat them.鈥
The Coos Bay researchers are trying to get ahead of the green crab problem, especially given the damage the species did on the East Coast.