Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Rearing white-clawed crayfish at Cynrig hatchery, Wales. Establishing a breeding population from introduced captive-bred animals. Cajun style crawfish A man selling dried crayfish at an African market. Crayfish [a] are freshwater crustaceans belonging to the infraorder Astacidea, which also contains lobsters.
The crawfish frog (Lithobates areolatus) [7] is a medium-sized species of frog native to the prairies and grasslands of the central United States. [8] It gets its name because it inhabits the burrows of crayfish for most of the year. They have defined golden or black circles all over their body. [9]
Female crayfish enter a secluded and secure place to release eggs and attach them to their swimmerets, at which point they are referred to as "in berry". Female crawfish will hold the eggs and the young until their second molt, they have been found with eggs and young during the months of May and June.
Scientists have determined that a colorful Indonesian crayfish has been mistakenly confused for similar creatures and remedied the situation by declaring it a unique species with a new name. They ...
The crawfish was said to be as thick as the trunk of a full-grown palm tree. [11] (At the time, the locals (the people of Leikigne) gave credence to the report and believed that the victim could not have drowned because he swam "like a dolphin" – but a shark would not have killed him either, because there are usually no sharks in the lagoon ...
Faxonius virilis is a species of crayfish known as the virile crayfish, northern crayfish, eastern crayfish, and lesser known as the lake crayfish or common crawfish. Faxonius virilis was reclassified in August 2017, and the genus was changed from Orconectes to Faxonius . [ 4 ]
The genus Cambarus is the second largest freshwater crayfish genus inhabiting the Northern Hemisphere, with only sixty fewer species than the genus Procambarus. [2] Though Cambarus are varied across species, the two terminal elements that make up the male form I gonopod form ninety degree angles with the central appendage, allowing for their identification.
Procambarus clarkii, known variously as the red swamp crayfish, Louisiana crawfish or mudbug, [3] is a species of cambarid crayfish native to freshwater bodies of northern Mexico, and southern and southeastern United States, but also introduced elsewhere (both in North America and other continents), where it is often an invasive pest.