Most pea crab species (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura: Pinnotheridae) are characterized by their symbiotic lifestyle, often thought to be obligate parasites or commensals (Baeza, 2015). The degree of host dependency is, however, still unclear for most species. The species within the subfamily Pinnotherinae are known to be endo-or ectosymbiotic inhabitants of bivalves, polyplacophorans, gastropods, holothurians, echinoids, brachiopods, and ascidians (de Gier & Becker, 2020). Although some species have a broad host spectrum spanning across various phyla, most species of Pinnotherinae are considered to be specialists. This means that these species are only inhabiting specific genera or orders within a host phylum. Several species of the two smaller subfamilies (Pinnixinae and Pinnixulalinae) are also found in bivalve, or in/on holothurian hosts in their adult stages, but most are considered to be free-living or tube/ burrow-dwelling, sharing this habitat with a worm, ghost shrimp, or mud lobster as a host (inquilism; see Palacios Theil et al., 2016;