Not to brag, but I think I’ve got the best story.
I had freshwater as an kid and always wanted saltwater but never had a motivating factor to make the jump.
Then, while clamming in the waters of Long Island NY, I found a crab of the species
calappa flammea. My background as a scuba instructor was the only thing that let me ID the crab. They’re native to the Keys and the Caribbean, so the obvious question becomes how the utter [BLEEP] did I find one in NY?
It’s pretty well established that North-bound currents sweeping up from the Gulf bring juvenile tropical fish with them, a local reef near my house gets spotfin butterflyfish every summer, and local spearfishermen (including myself!) frequently see tropical strays ranging from damselfish to sheepshead to tarpon! But the same phenomena is rarely, if ever, observed in crustaceans. To my knowledge (and I’ve done dozens and dozens of hours of digging) I am the first EVER recorded case of that type of crab being found in NY waters.
I can honestly say that the chances of me finding him WERE “needle-in-a-haystack” proportions, I had a one in a trillion find.
I found him in October 2022, the genus
Calappa are endemic to equatorial waters of around 70F and I found him in like 55F (and dropping). I ended up setting up a tank to keep my rare find alive! Named him “Cal” for
Calappa.
Unfortunately he has since passed away shortly after a cross-country tank move, but I had him for like 6-8 months and he molted twice, from juvenile to full adult size, under my care. Ultimately, I fell in love with the hobby as everyone who knows me suspected I would, and even post Cal I really enjoy it! Im now in the process of planning out a bigger build to transition away from my older AIO so as to better support an Acro-dominant mixed reef!