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  2. Crayfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crayfish

    Crayfish usually have limited home range and so they rest, digest, and eliminate their waste, most commonly in the same location each day. Feeding exposes the crayfish to risk of predation, and so feeding behaviour is often rapid and synchronised with feeding processes that reduce such risks — eat, hide, process and eliminate.

  3. Crayfish as food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crayfish_as_food

    Bahasa Indonesia; Jawa; ... The crayfish culinary trend swept mainland China since the late 1990s, and now as the world's largest producer and consumer of crayfish, ...

  4. Cherax pulcher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherax_pulcher

    Cherax pulcher is a species of crayfish from West Papua in Indonesia. It is popular as a freshwater aquarium species across Asia, Europe, and North America ...

  5. Cambaroides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambaroides

    Cambaroides is a genus of freshwater crayfish from eastern Asia (eastern Russia, northeastern China, Korean Peninsula and Japan). Together with Pontastacus, they are the only crayfish native to Asia. Cambaroides contains about six species: [1] [2] [3]

  6. Cherax boesemani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherax_boesemani

    Cherax boesemani is a relatively large crayfish, adult body length is 5–6 in (13–15 cm). [2] Variable blues, reds, and oranges are the predominant carapace colours, which has led to extensive selective breeding to create new commercial strains , with names such as Blue Moon , Supernova , Papuan red , tricolor and Red Brick .

  7. Cherax woworae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherax_woworae

    Cherax woworae, the steel blue crayfish, is a species of crayfish native to Southwest Papua, a province of Indonesia. [1] The species is popular in the pet trade, in which it is sold under the name "blue moon crayfish". [2] This has led to it becoming an introduced species in other countries, such as Hungary. [2]

  8. Palaeocambarus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palaeocambarus

    Palaeocambarus is an extinct genus of crayfish discovered in the Yixian Formation in China, with only a single species, Palaeocambarus licenti. It is one of the oldest known fossil crayfish. [1] [2] [3] The genus Cricoidoscelosus is now considered to be a junior synonym. [1]

  9. Cambaroides schrenckii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambaroides_schrenckii

    Cambaroides schrenckii is a species of crayfish endemic to north-eastern China and Russia. It is a freshwater species that also occurs in some brackish water areas. It occurs in habitats with still water, typically no more than 1 metre deep. [1] It was named after Leopold von Schrenck.