Habitat
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Soft bottoms deeper than 18 m, or on rocky faces overlooking soft bottoms.
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Distribution
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Geographical Range: Kodiak, Alaska to San Diego, CA
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Habitat
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Depth Range: Low intertidal to 547 m. Usually deep. In the Oregon offshore fishery they are mostly caught at 128-165 m depth.
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Comprehensive Description
provided by Invertebrates of the Salish Sea
The most distinctive feature of large lithodid crab is the fact that when it pulls its legs under itself and folds its claws across its front, as it often does, a large notch on the carpus of its chelipeds combined with a smaller notch on the carpus of leg 2 lie beside each other, creating a prominent tubelike opening presumably used for breathing. Other features include the fact that its abdomen is completely calcified and its legs are not markedly longer than the carapace. The carapace has tubercles with sharp spines and has no pronounced depression on the posterodorsal surface. It is rounded posterolaterally and does not resemble an equilateral triangle, and it has no lateral extensions which cover its legs when viewed from above. The sides of the walking legs are smooth and fit together tightly when folded, while the dorsal surfaces have tubercles and spines. The merus of the chelipeds has lateral extensions on its inner dorsal margin, and the carpus and propodus curve upward and cover the mouth when they are folded against the body. The largest cheliped has large, blunt white teeth on the cutting surface, while the small chela has small sharp teeth. The rostrum is a sharp upturned spine with more spines near the base, somewhat like that of Rhinolithodes wosnessenskii. Color is red-brown or tan with purplish and white areas. The chelae are tan and mottled red, with white on the dorsal side and orange or red fingers and white tips. Carapace width to 18.5 cm or larger. Maximum size in males is larger than that for females.
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Look Alikes
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How to Distinguish from Similar Species: The tubelike passage through the folded legs provides certain identification. Lopholithodes mandtii looks similar but it is more brightly colored and has blunt bumps rather than bumps with spines on its carapace. Rhinolithodes wosnessenskii and Phyllolithodes papillosus have a deep posterodorsal depression in their carapace. Oedignathus inermis has a soft abdomen.
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Comprehensive Description
provided by Invertebrates of the Salish Sea
Biology/Natural History: This species is said to feed by scooping up sediment with its claws, and also to feed on the clams it digs up. Will Duguid reports that in the laboratory adults of this species are strongly attracted to and feeds on brittle stars. They may also feed on urchins such as Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis. It is thought that octopus may be its main predator. It may bury itself in the sediment, except that the front with the foramen is exposed for breathing. The abdomen has knobby plates and Flora and Fairbanks say it is also partly soft and not held very tightly against the thorax. An intrmittent open coast fishery for this species exists off Oregon. This species is said to occur in large aggregations of mixed males and females on soft bottoms. Molting within an aggregation seems to be synchronous, but not synchronized with that of other aggregations. Eggs and larvae of snailfish, especially Careproctus melanurus, the blacktail snailfish, are often found among the gill filaments of these crabs. These may occur in large numbers and even may contribute to collapse of the gills, but usually they do not seem to cause any harm. Off British Columbia this species has a biennial cycle for brooding. Females molt and breed during mid-summer, then brooded their eggs and larvae for 18 months before releasing them as zoeae the second winter or early spring after breeding. Much of this long brooding period was due to the fact that the brooded eggs underwent a 12-month diapause in the gastrula stage. The females released the larvae gradually, averaging a period of 69 days. Brooding females have a mean carapace length of 8.9 cm and a minimum carapace length of 7.5 cm. Females which have been brooding for a number of months and post-breeding females often have extensive overgrowth of polychaete tubeworms, hydrozoans, and small bivalves. The distal legs and much of the underside has a black stain not seen on males or pre-incubation females.
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Brown box crab
provided by wikipedia EN
The brown box crab (Lopholithodes foraminatus) is a king crab that lives from Prince William Sound, Alaska to San Diego, California,[1] at depths of 0–547 metres (0–1,795 ft).[2] It reaches a carapace length of 150 millimetres (5.9 in) and feeds on bivalves and detritus. The box crab gets its name from a pair of round tunnel-like openings that form between the claws and adjacent legs when the animal folds its limbs up against its body.[3] Both claws, and their adjacent legs, have matching half-circle notches in them that line up to create a circle-shaped opening when the limbs are tightly pulled against one another.[4] This tubular round opening is called a foramen. The crab often lies buried in the sediment, and the two foramens in the chelipeds allow water into the gill chamber for respiration.[1] The gill chamber is also sometimes used by the commensal fish Careproctus to hold its eggs.[5]
Taxidermied museum specimen prepared in a position to show how the legs and claws form two
foramens while folded
References
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^ a b "Brown box crab, Lopholithodes formaminatus [sic]". Alaska Fisheries Science Center. Retrieved October 25, 2011.
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^ Chevaldonné, Pierre; Olu, Karine (1996). Robbins, C. Brian (ed.). "Occurrence of anomuran crabs (Crustacea: Decapoda) in hydrothermal vent and cold-seep communities: a review". Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. 109 (2): 286–298 – via the Biodiversity Heritage Library. PDF
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^ "Crab identification and soft-shell crab". Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife. Retrieved 2022-02-12.
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^ "Crab identification and soft-shell crab". Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife. Retrieved 2022-02-12.
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^ Peden, Alex E.; Corbett, Cathryn A. (1973). "Commensalism between a liparid fish, Careproctus sp., and the lithodid box crab, Lopholithodes foraminatus". Canadian Journal of Zoology. 51 (5): 555–556. doi:10.1139/z73-081.
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Brown box crab: Brief Summary
provided by wikipedia EN
The brown box crab (Lopholithodes foraminatus) is a king crab that lives from Prince William Sound, Alaska to San Diego, California, at depths of 0–547 metres (0–1,795 ft). It reaches a carapace length of 150 millimetres (5.9 in) and feeds on bivalves and detritus. The box crab gets its name from a pair of round tunnel-like openings that form between the claws and adjacent legs when the animal folds its limbs up against its body. Both claws, and their adjacent legs, have matching half-circle notches in them that line up to create a circle-shaped opening when the limbs are tightly pulled against one another. This tubular round opening is called a foramen. The crab often lies buried in the sediment, and the two foramens in the chelipeds allow water into the gill chamber for respiration. The gill chamber is also sometimes used by the commensal fish Careproctus to hold its eggs.
Taxidermied museum specimen prepared in a position to show how the legs and claws form two
foramens while folded
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