dcsimg

Habitat

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Usually on sand, mud, shell, or gravel bottoms.
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Distribution

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Geographical Range: Northern Alaska to southern California
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Habitat

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Depth Range: Intertidal to 146 m; usually subtidal
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Comprehensive Description

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This hermit crab has a carapace which is smooth and only the shield is calcified. The abdomen is asymmetrically coiled. The carpus of the right cheliped is longer than wide. The cheliped is shorter than the walking legs. The dactyls of legs 2 and 3 are longer than the merus, twisted in relation to the propodus, and have 2 reddish-brown stripes. The upper margin of the dactyl is serrated and the lower margin has close-set corneous spines. The merus of the walking legs is compressed laterally, with spines and toothed ridges. The carpus and propodus of the walking legs have serrated dorsal margins and small spines on the surface. The chelipeds are spiny dorsally and marginally but are nearly smooth ventrally. The dorsal side of the left cheliped is flat. The eystalks are short and the eyes are large and black. The legs and chelipeds have orange transverse bands. The ischium of the chelipeds has brown bands, the merus is pink, brown, and white with brown margins and teeth plus an orange distal band. The palm of the propodus is pale yellow. It has dark brown medial spines and red marginal spines. The finger of the propodus is white or gray-blue with a white tip and white teeth. The walking legs have a yellow and white ischium, a merus with white, tan, orange, and mahogany with scattered brown spots; a yellow carpus with dark spines plus a mahogany stripe posteriorly and a white patch near the end, a propodus with white, yellow, orange, and brown and a mahogany stripe, and a dactyl which is white, orange, and violet-blue with dark spines and two narrow brownish-red stripes. The legs have a green or gold iridescent sheen to them. The eyestalks have a red band at the base and white and brown bands. The antennal flagellum is pale yellow. Carapace shield length to 19.6 mm and total carapace length up to 4.5 cm.
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Look Alikes

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How to Distinguish from Similar Species: The large black eyes plus orange bands on the legs are distinctive. P. aleuticus and P. ochotensis have spines on the ventral side of the chelipeds, plus P. ochotensis has greenish-yellow eyes. Most other hermit crabs do not have the twisted dactyls on legs 2 and 3.
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Comprehensive Description

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Biology/Natural History: This is one of the largest and most common hermit crabs found in subtidal sandy areas. As seen in many other crab species, males carry females around prior to the female molting so that they can mate. This species can grow large and often lives in moon snail shells,Euspira lewisii. Small individuals may have shells covered with hydroids and have partly yellow eyes. It is often found among sea pens in Puget Sound. Females may carry up to three broods of eggs per year.
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Pagurus armatus

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Pagurus armatus, the armed hermit crab[2] or black-eyed hermit crab,[3] is a species of hermit crab found in the eastern Pacific Ocean[4] of the United States and British Columbia, Canada.[5]

Description

Pagurus armatus.jpg

P. armatus is one of the largest species of hermit crab:[3] adults may reach a carapace length of 43 mm (1.7 in).[6] The legs, including the claws, have bands of colour, in red, orange and white, and the claws bear short spines on the dorsal surface.[6] The eyestalks are short, but bear large black compound eyes.[6] P. armatus can be told apart from the similar P. ochotensis by the spines on its claws, which in P. ochotensis are replaced by granules. The two species are so similar that they have sometimes been considered members of the same species, but are now generally thought to be two distinct species.[1]

Ecology

P. armatus lives on a variety of substrates, being particularly abundant in sea pen beds, at depths of up to 117 m (384 ft)[6]

Type specimen

P. armatus was originally described (under the name Bernhardus armatus) from Puget Sound by James Dwight Dana. The holotype of P. armatus was lost in the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, and has been replaced with a lectotype.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Christopher B. Boyko & Alan W. Harvey (1998). "Bernhardus (= Pagurus) armatus Dana, 1851 (Decapoda, Anomura): replacement of the neotype by a rediscovered syntype". Crustaceana. 71 (5): 587–589. doi:10.1163/156854098X00464.
  2. ^ "Pagurus armatus". Integrated Taxonomic Information System.
  3. ^ a b Ellie Halcrow. "The Hermit Crab". OceanLink. Retrieved March 31, 2009.
  4. ^ Marianne Pan. "Pagurus armatus". SeaLifeBase. Retrieved March 31, 2009.
  5. ^ "Discover Life map of Pagurus armatus". Retrieved March 31, 2009.
  6. ^ a b c d "Pagurus armatus (armed hermit)". Zipcode Zoo. September 17, 2008.
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Pagurus armatus: Brief Summary

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Pagurus armatus, the armed hermit crab or black-eyed hermit crab, is a species of hermit crab found in the eastern Pacific Ocean of the United States and British Columbia, Canada.

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