'' Cott described the decorator crabs as using "concealment afforded by masks of adventitious material", giving as example the great spider crab
Hyas araneus of Britain "which disguises itself very perfectly". When
H. araneus specimens were moved from an environment where all the crabs were
camouflaged with short pieces of
seaweed into different environments, all of them had redecorated themselves with local materials after one night. One was among corallines, and was covered with a dense bush of the
Sertularia abietina (a
hydrozoan). Another was on small shells and gravel, and was decorated with those. A third was among the
Antedon rosaceus (a
crinoid), and had broken off pieces of crinoid arms as decoration. describes crabs of the genera
Stenorhynchus and
Inachus: the crab tears a piece of seaweed in its claws, chews it, and then rubs it firmly on its body until it catches on the "
Velcro-like hooked setae", Kristin Hultgren and Jay Stachowicz showed in 2011 that the species of
Majoidea whose juveniles camouflage themselves are scattered about the phylogenetic tree – some species do, some do not, and some do so only a little. About 75% of the Majoidea decorate themselves to some extent during at least one phase of their lifecycle, and this number includes all 8 families in that superfamily. ==Antipredator defence==