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Cryptobenthic Crab Assemblages Are More Distinct Across a 90 m Depth Gradient Than 2500 km of Shallow Marine Habitat in the Hawaiian Archipelago

August 11, 2025

Examining the variabilities of crab assemblages across the Hawaiian Islands.

Despite high biodiversity and the recognized importance of mesophotic habitats, most studies of coral reef community structure have focused on conspicuous taxa such as fishes and corals in shallow habitat <30 m. Here, we examined the variability of crab assemblages from Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structures deployed on shallow reefs across the Hawaiian Islands and a mesophotic depth gradient on O’ahu. Despite considerable variability among sites distributed across nearly 10 degrees of latitude, differences along the depth gradient on O’ahu alone were greater than among the shallow assemblages across the entire archipelago. This finding suggests that 90 m of depth is a stronger driver of brachyuran assemblage structure than the latitudinal, environmental, and anthropogenic gradients across the entire ~2500 km span of the Hawaiian Islands.


Hoban, M. L., Hurley, K. K. C., Reardon, K., Skillings, D. J., Timmers, M. A., & Toonen, R. J. (2025). Cryptobenthic crab assemblages are more distinct across a 90 m depth gradient than 2500 km of shallow marine habitat in the Hawaiian archipelago. Scientific Reports, 15(1). doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-10232-6

Last updated by Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center on 08/11/2025