Without much warning, the crabs began clustering together in a way that looked strange at first — almost chaotic. Instead of scattering or trying to flee, they started piling on top of one another in a dense living mass across the seafloor. Legs, shells, movement everywhere. At a glance, it almost looked like panic. But the longer researchers watched, the more it seemed like something much more deliberate was happening.
This wasn’t random. It appeared to be a form of protection. Some crabs, especially those with softer or more vulnerable shells, seemed to be tucking themselves underneath the others while harder-shelled crabs remained more exposed on top. In other words, the pile may not have just been a crowding response — it may have been a survival strategy. And then the reason for it became obvious. A stingray had entered the area.
That changed the entire scene immediately. Because now what had looked strange a few seconds earlier suddenly started to make sense. The crabs weren’t piling together by accident. They were reacting to danger.
And the robot crab, unlike the others, had been left completely outside the pile. Which turned out to be a very bad place to be.