- Tunnelling mud crab
Taxobox
name = Tunnelling mud crab
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Arthropod a
subphylum = Crustacea
classis =Malacostraca
ordo =Decapoda
subordo =Pleocyemata
infraordo = Brachyura
familia =Varunidae
genus = "Austrohelice "
species = "A. crassa"
binomial = "Austrohelice crassa"
binomial_authority = (Dana, 1851)
synonyms ="Helice crassa"The tunnelling mud crab, "Austrohelice crassa", is a marine large-eyed crab of the family
Grapsidae , endemic to the sea coasts ofNew Zealand . Theircarapace width is up to 40 mm. [Hsi-Te Shih and Hiroshi Suzuki (2008) Taxonomy, phylogeny and biogeography of the endemic mudflat crab Helice/Chasmagnathus complex (Crustacea: Brachyura: Varunidae) from East Asia. Zoological Studies 47(1):114-125. [http://zoolstud.sinica.edu.tw/Journals/47.1/114.pdf PDF] ]The tunnelling mud crab is common on mud flats, where they burrow. They are active by day and sleep by night, often closing their burrows with a plug of mud. As they are constantly preyed upon by birds and many other animals, their survival depends on how quickly they can withdraw into their burrows. They must also return frequently to their burrow to wet their
gill s.The tunnelling mud crab has two short stalked eyes. Coloration is brownish, with older specimens becoming greenish orange. They feed by filtering out
diatom s,alga e andbacteria from the rich mud which is their habitat. Predators includeparore ,cod ,flounder ,yellow-eye mullet , andeel s.Females are 'in berry' in early spring and summer (August to March), carrying about 16,000 eggs of 0.3 mm, which change colour from brownish-yellow to transparent green during 42 days of incubation. Females may reproduce more than once per season, and do not require to mate again for this.
References
External links
* [http://www.seafriends.org.nz/enviro/crust/grapsida.htm#Hemigrapsus%20edwardsi SeaFriends]
* [http://www.uniprot.org/taxonomy/151175 UnitProt consortium sequence and taxonomy database]
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