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  2. Macrobrachium ohione - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrobrachium_ohione

    Like other Macrobrachium species, the Ohio shrimp is amphidromous. The larvae must live in saltwater and move to fresh water as adults. This is accomplished by having the larvae drift, free-floating, down the river until they reach water where the salinity is high enough to support them. Females carrying eggs may also migrate downstream before ...

  3. Crangon franciscorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crangon_franciscorum

    The shrimp are short-lived, with a lifespan ranging up to 18 months for males and 30 months for females. The males spawn once, while longer-lived females spawn twice. Some evidence indicates the species may be protandrous hermaphrodites , which means that surviving males are transformed into females after one year of life.

  4. Mysida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mysida

    Mysida is an order of small, shrimp-like crustaceans in the malacostracan superorder Peracarida. Their common name opossum shrimps stems from the presence of a brood pouch or "marsupium" in females. The fact that the larvae are reared in this pouch and are not free-swimming characterises the order. The mysid's head bears a pair of stalked eyes ...

  5. Rimicaris exoculata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rimicaris_exoculata

    Rimicaris exoculata, commonly known as the 'blind shrimp', is a species of shrimp. It thrives on active hydrothermal edifices at deep-sea vents of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. [ 1 ] This species belongs to the Alvinocarididae family of shrimp, named after DSV Alvin, the vessel that collected the original samples described by M. L. Christoffersen in ...

  6. Branchinecta lynchi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branchinecta_lynchi

    The vernal pool fairy shrimp's natural predators include the vernal pool tadpole shrimp, or Lepidurus packardi, [8] salamanders, and beetle larvae. [5] Vernal pools are the ideal habitat for vernal pool fairy shrimp, as they typically cannot sustain larger aquatic predators that may pose a threat to the shrimp due to their drying tendencies.

  7. Syncaris pacifica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syncaris_pacifica

    This decapod is commonly known as California freshwater shrimp, and is the only extant decapod shrimp in California that occurs in non-saline waters (its congener Syncaris pasadenae from the basin of the Los Angeles River is extinct). [6] [7] S. pacifica is one of only four members of the family Atyidae in North America. [7]

  8. Palaemonidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palaemonidae

    Harlequin shrimp, Hymenocera picta. Palaemonidae is a family of shrimp in the order Decapoda. Many species are carnivores that eat small invertebrates, and can be found in any aquatic habitat except the deep sea. One significant genus is Macrobrachium, which contains commercially fished species.

  9. Eulimnadia texana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eulimnadia_texana

    Eulimnadia texana, the Texas clam shrimp or desert shrimp, is a species belonging to the Limnadiidae family. [2]It is endemic to North America.It is an arid land specialist, living for many years as a cyst and bursting into life at the arrival of rains, maturing rapidly in temporary pools and producing eggs that can remain dormant until the next rains occur, perhaps in many years time.