The names of decapod and stomatopod Crustacea from Tahiti, French Polynesia, established by Anthony Curtiss in 1938 and 1944
Author
Ng, Peter K. L.
Author
Eldredge, Lucius G.
Author
Evenhuis, Neal L.
text
Zootaxa
2011
2011-11-16
3099
43
56
journal article
45981
10.5281/zenodo.206896
b4c7e4b1-cc25-42ef-91ae-a205918bf357
1175-5326
206896
Cancer puru
Curtiss, 1938
[
áveu
;
uá vahi haári
]
Cancer latro
Linnaeus, 1767: 1049
.
Cancer puru
Curtiss, 1938: 169
,
n. syn
.
Curtiss (1938: 168)
noted that “The coconut crab, called at Tahiti
áveu
or
uá vahi haári,
is not found on Tahiti; but occurs on the islands of Mehetia and Makatea, and in the Tuamotus, where it is called
kaveu
”. Curtiss’s (1938: 168–169) detailed description of the adult and its behaviour, even saying at one point “The creature goes about with its arse curved up under its thorax” leave little doubt that the species in question is
Birgus latro
(
Linnaeus, 1767
) (Coenobitidae)
.
Curtiss (1938: 169)
commented that
Cancer puru
was absent on Tahiti but present on the islands of Mehetia and Makatea. Mehetia is in the Windward Islands to the east of the Society Islands while Makatea in the northwestern part of the Tuamotus. Joseph Poupin (personal communication) confirmed that
Birgus latro
is still present in Makatea and has been seen photographed there recently. He, however, further commented that “Mehetia is more surprising and I have never heard of its presence there before. It is a small volcanic island in the east of Tahiti, without a lagoon. It is uninhabited and rarely visited by Polynesians.
As
it is uninhabited, however,
Birgus latro
can be found there because this animal tends to occur in uninhabited places”.
As
is true throughout its range,
Birgus latro
is extensively hunted for food and, unless protected, is quickly made extinct in areas where there are human inhabitants. With regards to the Marquesas, Joseph Poupin (personal communication) wrote: “Previous records of
Birgus latro
in the Marquesas (
Gibson-Hill 1948: 10
) are doubtful. I have never seen
Birgus latro
in this archipelago despite several campaigns and, above all, Marquesas friends of mine that have grown up in the Marquesas told me that they have never seen the coconut crab there and neither have their fathers and grandfathers” (see also
Poupin 2005: 81
). In addition,
Adamson (1935: 18)
wrote in his account of the fauna of Marquesas that “Residents in the Islands assured us that it does not occur here”.