Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The crayfish culinary trend swept mainland China since the late 1990s, and now as the world's largest producer and consumer of crayfish, all of China's crayfish are farmed Procambarus clarkii.
Cambaroides is a genus of freshwater crayfish from eastern Asia (eastern Russia, northeastern China, Korean Peninsula and Japan). Together with Pontastacus, they are the only crayfish native to Asia. Cambaroides contains about six species: [1] [2] [3]
Crayfish usually have limited home range and so they rest, digest, and eliminate their waste, most commonly in the same location each day. Feeding exposes the crayfish to risk of predation, and so feeding behaviour is often rapid and synchronised with feeding processes that reduce such risks — eat, hide, process and eliminate.
Cambaroididae is a family of crayfish. It contains two genera, the extant Cambaroides , known from a number of species living in East Asia, and the extinct Palaeocambarus , known from the Early Cretaceous ( Barremian - Aptian ) Yixian Formation of China.
Cambaroides similis is a species of crayfish endemic to the Korean Peninsula and neighbouring parts of China. [1] References
Cambaroides dauricus is a species of crayfish endemic to north-eastern China, the Korean Peninsula and neighbouring parts of Russia. [1]
Cambaroides schrenckii is a species of crayfish endemic to north-eastern China and Russia. It is a freshwater species that also occurs in some brackish water areas. It occurs in habitats with still water, typically no more than 1 metre deep. [1] It was named after Leopold von Schrenck.
Astacidae is a family of freshwater crayfish native to Europe, western Asia and western North America. The family is made up of four extant (living) genera: The genera Astacus (which includes the European crayfish), Pontastacus (which includes the Turkish crayfish), and Austropotamobius are all found throughout Europe and parts of western Asia, while Pacifastacus (which includes the signal ...