Some Porcelain Crabs look good enough to be made into porcelain collectables. They still wouldn't be proper crabs though!
Porcelain Crabs are almost 300 species in the family Porcellanidae, found in all the world's oceans except the Arctic and Antarctic. They are most closely related to Squat Lobsters, who aren't really lobsters.
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Image: WoRMS for SMEBD |
Porcelain Crabs tend to be small...
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Image: WoRMS for SMEBD |
or tiny, and are often found under rocks in tide pools.
Others are polite enough to hang out on corals and sea anemones so we can get a close look at them and their feeding habits.
Now we can see how their mouthparts are modified into feathery fans for filter feeding.
It all looks incredibly enthusiastic, so much waving and finger-licking!
I could never get so excited over plankton. Chocolate covered plankton, however...
Porcelains look just like true crabs because they have their tails tucked between their legs, also known as a reduced abdomen carried beneath the thorax.
However, keep your wits about you and you'll see two clearly visible differences!
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Image: Elias Levy via Flickr
Looks like a fun place to be! |
One, Porcelain Crabs have long antennae, in contrast to the true crab's
scarcely visible stubs.
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Image: Bill Bouton via Flickr
2 big claws, 2 long antennae and 6 apparent legs |
Two, the Porcelain's last pair of legs are tiny, scarcely visible and often completely hidden. They end up looking like they have 6 walking legs and 2 claws, while almost all true crabs clearly have 8 legs. It's a situation much like their relative, the
Coconut Crab. Also not really a crab.
Sometimes they have even less legs, but that's because they fall apart at the first sign of trouble. In other words, they're keen to lose their limbs when predators come calling. They'll grow back later though, which is more than can be said for
actual porcelain.
The claws can look truly formidable, but their use seems to be devoted primarily to maintaining territory against other Porcelain Crabs.
they're adorable! i kinda have a soft spot for anything mini, though. :)
ReplyDeleteThey are! And those claws look significantly less terrifying for their tiny size.
ReplyDeleteSo what are they related to - if they are not really crabs? Prawns?
ReplyDeleteSquat Lobsters! Which aren't actually lobsters.
ReplyDeleteTogether they're most closely related to King Crabs (not really crabs), Coconut Crabs (not really crabs), Hermit Crabs (not really crabs) and Mole Crabs (not really crabs).
All those are then related to lobsters, true crabs, shrimps and a few others, who form a massive group which is related to prawns.
These are the Decapods.