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Can you spot the crab in this photo? (Hint: It's under the fuzz.)

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A crab species that was recently discovered in Australia fashions itself massive hats and coats made from living sponges, which makes the crustacean look like a wonderfully squeezable stuffed toy. 

(Don't be fooled, though — there's a tough exoskeleton beneath all the shaggy fluff!)

A family first spotted the crab, the newly named Lamarckdromia beagle, when it washed up on a beach near the city of Denmark in Western Australia. They sent the specimen to Andrew Hosie, curator of the crustacea and worms collections at the Western Australian Museum in Perth, who recognized the animal as some kind of sponge crab, albeit a "pretty unusual" one. 

"The extreme fluffiness was the give away for us," Hosie told Live Science in an email. "The sponge crabs are often hairy, but it is more like felt or velvet, rather than this complete shaggy coat."

Members of the sponge crab family (Dromiidae) use their sharp front claws to collect bits of sponges and ascidians — filter-feeders such as sea squirts — and use specialized back legs to hold these trimmings above their heads. In time, these trimmings accumulate to form a kind of tight-fitted cap over the crab, helping the animal avoid being spotted by predatory fish, other crabs and octopuses that might eat it. Sponges are also known to produce noxious chemicals, which likely make the crab a less tempting snack for predators, Hosie said.

Related: Watch a giant spider crab bust out of its own shell in wild time-lapse video 

Upon receiving the sponge-covered specimen, Hosie contacted Colin McLay, a retired marine biologist and former associate professor at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand, who has studied sponge crabs for decades. McLay confirmed that the crab was a previously-unknown species. 

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