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Chaceon quinquedens, commonly known as the red deep-sea crab, [2] but sold as Atlantic deep sea red crab, or simply Atlantic red crab or red crab, is a crab that lives in the Atlantic Ocean off the East Coast of the United States and Canada, from North Carolina to Nova Scotia, [3] [4] and in the Gulf of Mexico.
Red crabs have only been commercially fished for about 30 years, so little is known about their biology and reproduction. The National Marine Fisheries Service has deemed them a data-poor stock.
Grapsus grapsus is a typically shaped crab, with five pairs of legs, the front two bearing small, blocky, symmetrical chelae (claws). The other legs are broad and flat, with only the tips touching the substrate. The crab's round, flat carapace is slightly longer than 8 centimetres (3.1 in).
Red crab may refer to: Red king crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) Christmas Island red crab (Gecarcoidea natalis) Chaceon quinquedens, also known as the "deep-sea red crab" Pleuroncodes planipes, a squat lobster also known as the "pelagic red crab" Dungeness crab (Metacarcinus magister
Calappa calappa, also known as the smooth box crab or red-spotted box crab, is a tropical marine species of crab with an Indo-Pacific distribution, and showing great variability in its patterning and colouration.
As they grow, these crabs migrate upwards, with the adults only found at depths of less than 800 m (2,600 ft). Due to the shallow slopes in the north-eastern Atlantic, these migrations involve distances of 20–50 kilometres (12–31 mi). [5] Geryon trispinosus occurs in the same localities as the squat lobster Munida sarsi.
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Portunus haanii (swimming crab, red swimming crab, red swimmer crab, or warty swimming crab [1] [2]) is a species of crab. It is a source of commercial crab meat in Vietnam and China. [ 3 ]