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Geryon trispinosus

Species of crab


Summary

Species of crab

  • Cancer trispinosus Herbst, 1803
  • Cancer tridens Herbst, 1790 (suppressed)
  • Cancer tridens Fabricius, 1798

Geryon trispinosus is a species of crab that lives in deep water in the north-eastern Atlantic Ocean.

Description

Geryon trispinosus is a small crab, reaching a carapace length of up to 40 mm. The carapace is roughly hexagonal in shape, and reddish brown in colour. It is broader than it is long, with three conspicuous teeth on either side at the front. The pereiopods are paler than the carapace; they are quite narrow and long, with the third and fourth pairs being the longest.

Distribution

Geryon trispinosus is found in the north-eastern Atlantic Ocean. Its range extends from Norway in the north to the Bay of Biscay in the south, and also includes the Canary Islands.

Life cycle and ecology

Females reach sexual maturity at a carapace length of 12 -, while males reach it at 35 mm. Eggs are laid in April, and the eggs hatch into planktonic larvae, which eventually settle as juveniles at depths greater than 1000 m. As they grow, these crabs migrate upwards, with the adults only found at depths of less than 800 m. Due to the shallow slopes in the north-eastern Atlantic, these migrations involve distances of 20 -.

Geryon trispinosus occurs in the same localities as the squat lobster Munida sarsi. M. sarsi lives abundantly at depths of 700 -, and out-competes young G. trispinosus, and limits their survival to those depths where it is absent. Another squat lobster, M. tenuimana, lives at greater depths, but in much lower numbers, and therefore does not impact the survival of G. trispinosus as severely.

Taxonomy

Geryon trispinosus was first described in 1803 by Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Herbst, as "Cancer trispinosus", although he described the locality erroneously as the East Indies. In 1837, Henrik Nikolai Krøyer erected the genus Geryon, setting "Geryon tridens" as the type species. This was later synonymised with Herbst's species. In 1989, Raymond B. Manning and Lipke Holthuis erected a new genus, Chaceon, to accommodate most of the species previously in Geryon, which was left with only two species, G. trispinosus and G. longipes from the Mediterranean Sea.

References

References

  1. International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature. (1964). "Opinion 712. Forty-seven genera of decapod Crustacea: placed on the Official List". [[Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature]].
  2. "''Geryon tridens''". Marine Species Identification Portal.
  3. (1991). "Aspects of the biology of the deep-sea crab ''Geryon trispinosus'' from the Porcupine Seabight". [[Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom]].
  4. (1996). "The family Geryonidae (Decapoda, Brachyura) in the Canary Islands". [[Crustaceana]].
  5. (1990). "A depth-related distribution of the red crab, ''Geryon trispinosus'' (Herbst) [= ''G. tridens'' Krøyer]: indications of vertical migration". [[Progress in Oceanography]].
  6. [[Raymond B. Manning]] & [[Lipke Holthuis. (1987). "The status of ''Geryon trispinosus'' (Herbst) (Geryonidae)". [[Investigación Pesquera]].
  7. [[Raymond B. Manning]] & [[Lipke Holthuis. (1989). "Two new genera and nine new species of geryonid crabs (Crustacea, Decapoda, Geryonidae)". [[Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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