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Capture (blue) and aquaculture (green) production of Indo-Pacific swamp crab (Scylla serrata) in thousand tonnes from 1950 to 2022, as reported by the FAO [1]Scylla serrata (often called mud crab or mangrove crab, although both terms are highly ambiguous, and black crab) is an ecologically important species of crab found in the estuaries and mangroves of Africa, Australia, and Asia.
Scylla olivacea, commonly known as the orange mud crab, is a commercially important species of mangrove crab in the genus Scylla. It is one of several crabs known as the mud crab and is found in mangrove areas from Southeast Asia to Pakistan , and from Japan to northern Australia .
Scylla paramamosain is a mud crab commonly consumed in Southeast Asia. Distribution. Identification.
The knot-fingered mud crab is a small crab with unequal-sized chelae. The larger one is particularly broad and has teeth in the "molar area" and an immobile finger. Often this claw is worn and coalesced. The carapace and upper side of the limbs are a dull mottled reddish colour while the undersides of the body and limbs are whitish.
orange mud crab: Southeast Asia to Pakistan, and from Japan to northern Australia Scylla paramamosain Estampador, 1949: South China Sea south to the Java Sea Scylla serrata (Forskål, 1775) black crab: Southern Japan to south-eastern Australia, northern New Zealand Scylla tranquebarica (Fabricius, 1798)
Eurypanopeus depressus, the flatback mud crab or depressed mud crab, is a true crab belonging to the infraorder Brachyura and the family Panopeidae. [2] It is native to the western Atlantic Ocean and is often found in estuaries and lagoons, commonly living in close association with oysters .
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Rhithropanopeus harrisii (common names include the Zuiderzee crab, [2] dwarf crab, [2] estuarine mud crab, [3] Harris mud crab, [3] white-fingered mud crab, [4] and white-tipped mud crab) is a small omnivorous crab native to Atlantic coasts of the Americas, from New Brunswick to Veracruz.