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All Lobsters trend toward omnivorism... eating everything in their path with age/growth... all specimens over about four inches in length are unsuitable for anything other than rough and tumble systems of size. Subphylum Crustacea: About 42,000 species of some of the most familiar arthropods; crabs, shrimps, lobsters, crayfish, wood-lice (sow-bugs, rolly-pollies, you know, terrestrial isopods, and aquatic, even parasitic marine ones). Many small members in fresh and marine habitats of importance in aquatic food chains. Primarily aquatic, mostly marine. Some common characteristics of the crustaceans: 1) Their heads are more or less uniform with five pair of appendages: they have two pair of antennae (this feature is distinctive within the phylum); the third pair as opposing, biting, grinding mandibles. Behind the mandibles there are two pair of accessory feeding appendages, the first and second maxillae. 2) Their bodies trunks are composed of distinct segments covered by a chitinous exoskeleton strengthened by deposition of calcium salts. 3) Crustacean appendages are typically biramous (two major elements). 4) They typically have a carapace covering the trunk of their bodies. Enough of this detail. We'll cover this stuff in more general survey pieces of the mega-groups. On toward the lobsters. A systematic resume of the Crustacea is necessarily large and complex. Allow me to semi-skirt around a full discussion here. The nine Classes that don't include our family of interest enclose the primitive cephalocaridans (C. Cephalocarida), the Class Branchiopoda (fairy shrimps, tadpole shrimps, water fleas (Daphnia); the Class Ostracoda, Class Copepoda (Anchor worm, Lernaea), Classes Mystacocarida, Branchiura, Tantulocarida, Remipedia, Cirripedia (barnacles), whew! & finally, our: Class Malacostraca: Comprises almost three-fourths of all described species of crustaceans and most of the larger forms, such as crabs, lobsters, and shrimps. Characteristics: Trunks typically composed of 14 segments plus the telson ("tail"); the first 8 segments form the thorax, the last 6 the abdomen; all segments bear appendages. Four Superorders: Syncarida, Hoplocarida, Peracarida, and the one we want to talk about, the Eucarida. Superorder Eucarida contains many of the large malacostracans. They have highly developed carapaces displaying fusion of all thoracic segments (the cepahalothorax). Eyes are stalked... Two living orders; the Euphausiacea (krill) and the: Order Decapoda includes the familiar shrimps, crayfish, lobsters and crabs. This is the largest order of crustaceans with @10,000 species. Decapods are distinguishable from euphausiaceans and other malacostracans in that their first three pair of thoracic appendages, The remaining five pairs are legs (Decapoda= "ten feet"). Decapods are divided into two Suborders, the Dendrobranciata, with "tree-like" branched gills, body laterally compressed..., eggs planktonic, nauplius as the first larval stage (as in Artemia, our brine shrimp), as an example of further, finer, to-the-species classification the: Suborder Pleocyemata: with phyllobranchiate and trichobranchiate gills, eggs carried by the female on pleopods and hatch as zoeae. Divided into six Infraorders on the basis of structural differences in the cephalothorax and legs, & development. Or: Phylum Arthropoda:
Infraorder Astacoidea, Superfamily Nephropoidea, Family Nephropidae, the Clawed Lobsters. One pair antennae. Genera Homarus, Metanephrops, Nephrops, Nephropsis
Infraorder Palinura: has members with the cephalothorax more or less cylindrical, abdomen well developed, flattened dorsoventrally. Legs may be chelate or subchelate, but the first pair in most species is not enlarged. These are the "spiny" (versus the Infraorder Astcidea's "clawed") lobsters. Superfamily Palinuroidea, Family Palinuridae, Spiny Lobsters. First walking legs as such, not pinchers or claws. Genera Jasus, Linuparus, Palinurus, Panulirus, Puerulus
Family Scyllaridae , the Slipper, Spanish, Locust, Shovel-Nosed Lobsters. Genera Ibacus, Parribacus, Scyllarides, Thenus
Bibliography/Further Reading: "100 Fun Facts About Lobsters." http://www.woodmans.com/100-lobster-facts/ Lobsters of the World (FAO): http://xrom.com/cdprod1/cdhrec/010/242.shtml Anon. A look at lobsters. Modified trap catches both spiny and "slipper" lobsters. Natl. Fisherman.; vol. 64, no. 7, pp. 64-67; 1983. Baensch, Hans & Helmut Debelius. 1994. Marine Atlas, v.1. MERGUS, Germany. 1215pp. Barnes, Robert. 1987. Invertebrate Zoology. Saunders. Choat, J.H.; Barnes, D; Borowitzka M.A.; Coll J.C.; Davies P.J.; Flood P.; Hatcher B.G.; Hopley D. et al (eds.) Proceedings of the sixth international coral reef symposium, Townsville, Australia, 8th-12th August 1988. Vol. 2. Papers Rudloe A. Preliminary studies of the mariculture potential of the slipper-lobster Scyllarides nodifer. Debelius, Helmut. 1986. Reef Lobsters: Genus Enoplometopus. FAMA 3/86. Friese, U. Erich. 1984. Crustaceans for the home aquarium, part 2- lobsters and crayfish. FAMA 11/84. Gosliner, Terrence M, David W. Behrens and Gary C. Williams. 1996. Coral Reef Animals of the Indo-Pacific. Animal live from Africa to Hawai'i exclusive of the vertebrates. Sea Challengers, Monterey California. 314pp. Headstrom, Richard. 1979. All about lobsters, crabs, shrimps and their relatives. Dover Publ. Hoover, John P. 1998. Hawai'i's Lobsters. FAMA 10/98. Humann, Paul. 1992. Reef Creature Guide. Florida, Caribbean, Bahamas. New World Publications, FL. 320pp. Hunziker, Ray. 1988. Curious crustaceans- the Reef Lobsters. TFH 1/88. Kerstitch, Alex. 1988. Samurai in painted armors. A look at the remarkable lobster, not as a gourmet's delight, but as an aquarium resident. FAMA 7/88. Kosaki, Randall K. 1987. Hawaiian cave crustaceans. FAMA 4/87. Reeves, Linda. 1994. Florida lobster diving. Where to find and how to catch these wily crustaceans. Skin Diver 7/94. Robles, Carlos. 1996. Turf battles in the tidal zone (palinurid lobsters). Natural History 7/96. Segars, Herb. 1992. The North American Lobster. Discover Diving 1-2/92. Sleeper, Jeanne Bear. 1992. West coast lobster hunting. Skin Diver 10/92. Walls, Jerry G. 1977. Lobster tales. TFH 12/77. Williams, Austin B. 1988. Lobsters of the World- An Illustrated Guide. Osprey Books. |
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