The Hairy Leg Mountain Crab, belonging to Maydelliathelphusa or allied potamid genera from Thailand and adjacent regions, is named for the prominent setae — stiff hairs — covering its legs, an adaptation for maintaining grip on smooth, slippery wet boulders in fast-flowing mountain streams. It inhabits high-altitude forest waterways with excellent water quality, strong current, and high dissolved oxygen.
In captivity, a waterfall-style paludarium or strong-flow stream aquarium most faithfully replicates its natural environment. Rocky structures with crevices and wet emersed surfaces allow the crab to display its natural behaviour of clinging to boulders in the waterfall splash zone. Water quality must be pristine, as highland stream species evolved in extremely low-pollution environments.
This crab is semi-aquatic, spending time both fully submerged and on emergent wet surfaces. It is a direct developer. Diet encompasses invertebrates, plant material, biofilm, and organic detritus. In captivity it adapts to sinking pellets, dried insects, frozen bloodworm, and blanched vegetables. Its unusual leg morphology and ecological specialisation make it one of the most distinctive freshwater crabs in the hobby.