The crab-eating frog (Fejervarya cancrivora) is a
frog native to south-eastern
Asia including Taiwan,[2] China,
Sumatra in Indonesia,[3] the
Philippines and more rarely as far west as
Orissa in India.[4] It has also been introduced to
Guam, most likely from Taiwan.[5] It inhabits
mangrove swamps and marshes and is one of 144 known
modern amphibians which can tolerate brief excursions into
seawater, and is possibly the only extant marine amphibian.[6]
This frog can tolerate marine environments (immersion in sea water for brief periods or
brackish water for extended periods) by increasing
urea production and retention, and by remaining slightly hyperosmotic within urea and sodium flux.[7][8][9] Adults can survive in salt water with salinity as high as 2.8%, and tadpoles can survive salinities as high as 3.9%.[10]
Diet
The food sources of the crab-eating frog are mainly determined by the locally available prey. Near fresh water, its diet consists largely of insects. But in an environment with brackish water, small
crustaceans, including
crabs, form the main part.[11]
Human consumption
In Southeast Asia, the crab-eating frog is locally hunted for food and is often farmed for its
edible legs, including in Java, Indonesia.[12]
^Tanjung RD, Kusrini MD, Mardiastuti A, Yustian I, Setiawan A, Iqbal M. 2023. Amphibian community structure in Isau-Isau Wildlife Reserve, South Sumatra, Indonesia. Biodiversitas 24: 6836-6843.
^Wostl, Elijah, Eric N. Smith, and Robert N. Reed. 2016. Origin and Identity of Fejervarya (Anura: Dicroglossidae) on Guam. Pacific Science 70(2):233-241.
https://doi.org/10.2984/70.2.9
^Hopkins, Gareth R.; Brodie, Edmund D. (2015). "Occurrence of Amphibians in Saline Habitats: A Review and Evolutionary Perspective". Herpetological Monographs. 29: 1–27.
doi:
10.1655/HERPMONOGRAPHS-D-14-00006.
S2CID83659304.
Inger, Robert F.; Stuebing, Robert B. (1997). A Field guide to the Frogs of Borneo (2nd ed.). Kota Kinabalu, Borneo: Natural History Publications.
ISBN983-812-085-5.
Iskandar, Djoko Tjahono (1998). Amfibi Jawa dan Bali. Bogor (Indonesia): Puslitbang Biologi - LIPI.
ISBN979-579-015-3.
Iskandar, Djoko Tjahono; Colijn, Ed (December 2000). "Preliminary Checklist of Southeast Asian and New Guinean Herpetofauna. I. Amphibians". Treubia. 31 (3 Suppl): 1–133.