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  2. Declawing of crabs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Declawing_of_crabs

    Declawing of crabs is the process whereby one or both claws of a crab are manually detached before the return of the live crab to the water, as practiced in the fishing industry worldwide. Crabs commonly have the ability to regenerate lost limbs after a period of time, and thus declawing is viewed as a potentially more sustainable method of ...

  3. Atlantic red crabs: Learn more about the deep-sea delicacy ...

    www.aol.com/atlantic-red-crabs-learn-more...

    Deep-sea Atlantic red crabs are one of the latest culinary delights found in the seafood market. ... Unbeknownst to us, the female was about to molt. One morning, I came in, and the male crab had ...

  4. Perisesarma bidens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perisesarma_bidens

    Perisesarma bidens, the red claw crab (or red-clawed crab), is a species of crab found in the Indo-Pacific region from Zanzibar to Japan and Fiji. [1] Size.

  5. Perisesarma guttatum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perisesarma_guttatum

    The claw of the crab consists of a palm and dactylus. At the end of the dactylus are oval or circular shaped bumps called tubercles. The part leading up to the claws, the chelar carpus, also has pectinate crests on males within the genus. [6] A pectinate crest is a ridge-like projection on the crab; these ridges line the chelar carpus side-by ...

  6. Dungeness crab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dungeness_crab

    For the first two years of a crab's life, it will molt six times a year. [9] In the third year, males molt twice and females molt once. After that, all crabs will molt once a year, with females molting in the spring and males molting in the summer. [4] Dungeness typically live five years and measure 6–7 in (150–180 mm) at the end of their ...

  7. Florida stone crab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florida_stone_crab

    When a claw is broken such that the diaphragm at the body/claw joint is left intact, the wound will quickly heal itself and very little blood is lost. If, however, the claw is broken in the wrong place, more blood is lost and the crab's chances of survival are much lower. Each time the crab molts, the new claw grows larger.

  8. Fiddler crab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiddler_crab

    The fiddler crab or calling crab can be one of the hundred species of semiterrestrial marine crabs in the family Ocypodidae. [2] These crabs are well known for their extreme sexual dimorphism, where the male crabs have a major claw significantly larger than their minor claw, whilst females claws are both the same size. [3]

  9. Chiromantes haematocheir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiromantes_haematocheir

    Red-clawed crab in Kanagawa, Japan. Chiromantes haematocheir, commonly known as red-clawed crab, is a species of mudflat crab in the family Sesarmidae. It is endemic to East Asia and is quite distinct from the other species placed in the genus Chiromantes. The genus may be restricted to this one species. [1]