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Dungeness Crab

Metacarcinus magister Schweitzer & Feldmann 2000

Associations

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Seals, sea lions, and a variety of fish eat Dungeness crabs.

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Khatain, L. 2000. "Cancer magister" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Cancer_magister.html
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Larissa Khatain, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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George Hammond, Animal Diversity Web
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Morphology

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Cancer magister is a decapod. Decopods' thoracic segment is fused with that of the head, to form the cephalothorax, which is covered by a carapace. The Dungeness crab has five pairs of thoracic legs. The first pair of legs is larger then the last four and has pinching claws. Cancer magister is a walking crab and therefore, the last pair of legs is adapted for walking. It has a flat and broad body, oval in shape. The anterior margin of the carapace has nine small teeth on each side, forming an elliptical curve. At the end of the curve, a large, pointed tooth projects directly outward. From this tooth, the carapace slopes backward, forming a narrow posterior end. Males range from 18 to 23 centimeters (about 7 to 9 inches)in width and 10 to 13 centimeters (4 to 5 inches) long. The color of the carapace is reddish-brown, fading towards the back. The legs and ventral side are yellowish.

Range length: 10 to 13 mm.

Other Physical Features: ectothermic ; heterothermic ; bilateral symmetry

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Khatain, L. 2000. "Cancer magister" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Cancer_magister.html
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Larissa Khatain, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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George Hammond, Animal Diversity Web
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Habitat

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Dungeness crabs are found on the Pacific coast in sandy bottoms below the tidal mark. They can also be found at lowtide in sandy or muddy bays where there is a good growth of eel grass. Dungeness crabs are intolerant of low dissolved oxygen conditions. Also, even low amounts of ammonia are toxic to the crabs. Dungeness crabs also tend to grow better in water that is above six degrees Celsius (Kozloff 1973).

Habitat Regions: temperate ; saltwater or marine

Aquatic Biomes: benthic ; coastal ; brackish water

Other Habitat Features: estuarine

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Khatain, L. 2000. "Cancer magister" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Cancer_magister.html
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Larissa Khatain, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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George Hammond, Animal Diversity Web
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Distribution

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Cancer magister, commonly known as Dungeness crab, is found in the costal waters from Point Concepcion, California, to the Pribilof Islands, Alaska. The Dungeness crabs inhabit the estuaries from Morro Bay, California, to Puget Sound, Washington.

Biogeographic Regions: pacific ocean (Native )

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Khatain, L. 2000. "Cancer magister" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Cancer_magister.html
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Larissa Khatain, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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George Hammond, Animal Diversity Web
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Trophic Strategy

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Cancer magister eat a variety of marine invertebrates and fish. As juveniles, the Dungeness crabs feed on fish, shrimp, molluscs and crustaceans. Adults feed on bivalves, crustaceans and fishes. The crabs are able to open shells by chipping away at them with their heavy pinching claws.

Animal Foods: carrion ; mollusks; aquatic crustaceans; zooplankton

Primary Diet: carnivore (Insectivore , Eats non-insect arthropods)

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Khatain, L. 2000. "Cancer magister" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Cancer_magister.html
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Larissa Khatain, Southwestern University
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George Hammond, Animal Diversity Web
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Benefits

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Dungeness carbs are an important commercial shellfish. Male crabs are harvested along the coast of North America from Alaska to California. The fishery is worth tens of millions of dollars, due to the thousands of crabs caught annually.

Positive Impacts: food

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Khatain, L. 2000. "Cancer magister" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Cancer_magister.html
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Larissa Khatain, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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George Hammond, Animal Diversity Web
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Conservation Status

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Dungeness crabs are affected by many insecticides. The insecticide carbaryl, also known as Sevin, is particularly toxic to the Dungeness crab. Other toxins include other insecticides and fungicides as well as ammonia. Urban pollutants such as heavy metals, PCB's and hydrocarbons also affect the Dungeness crab. Runoff of pesticides and herbicides affect the Dungeness crab populations as well. Dungeness crabs are not endangered, however, these chemicals can kill or upset the health of Dungeness crab populations.

US Federal List: no special status

CITES: no special status

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Khatain, L. 2000. "Cancer magister" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Cancer_magister.html
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Larissa Khatain, Southwestern University
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George Hammond, Animal Diversity Web
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Untitled

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Dungeness crab were named after a fishing town on the coast of Washington. Only the males are harvested, the females are thrown back into the water.

A tagging study was conducted by the California Department of Fish and Game. This study showed that crabs reared in the San Francisco Bay grew about twice the rate as ocean-reared crabs. The average carapace was appoximately 100 millimeters after one year. The hypothesis is that warmer bay temperatures and increased food availability is resposible for the rapid growth.

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Khatain, L. 2000. "Cancer magister" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Cancer_magister.html
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Larissa Khatain, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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George Hammond, Animal Diversity Web
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Reproduction

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Males attract the females by use of pheromones, which are chemical scents. During mating, the male crabs clasp the female so that the undersides of each are close. The male's breeding structures place the sperm into the female's body. This is only possible when the female is soft shelled, right after molting. This lasts less than thirty minutes. Mating occurs in near-shore costal locations, outside of estuaries. The eggs are not fertilized and spawned until the fall, following the summer breeding. After fertilization, about half a million to one million eggs are attatched to the female's abdomen. These eggs are brooded there until spring. The larvae are planktonic and use tidal currents to travel into estuaries. The larvae pass through six stages over a 105 to 125 day period. The last two stages are zoea and megalopa. Zoea have a jointed abdomen and a spined carapace behind the head with large eyes. Megalops have big eyes, an extended abdomen, elongated carapace and swimming legs. After the first molting, the form changes to that similar to the adults. Growth after this point occurs by shedding its shell, molting, at certain periods of time, until it reahces full growth (Headstrom 1979, Mash 1975).

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Khatain, L. 2000. "Cancer magister" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Cancer_magister.html
author
Larissa Khatain, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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George Hammond, Animal Diversity Web
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Distribution

provided by Invertebrates of the Salish Sea
Geographical Range: Occurs from Alaska to Santa Barbara, California.
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Comprehensive Description

provided by Invertebrates of the Salish Sea
Biology/Natural History: This crab is the largest edible crab from Alaska to California, making this species important for fisheries commercially and economically. There appear to be five subspecies in California alone. The female Dungeness crab can lay up to 2.5 million eggs and can live up to at least 6 years. Females can store sperm received during one mating season and use it during the next season. This species is a carnivore that feeds on more than 40 different species including small clams, oysters, fish, shrimp, worms and according to recent studies even feeds on Velella velella nematocysts. The larvae of this species is often attached to the bells of jelly fishes and to their tentacles; these larvae feed on the gonozooids, and by doing so gain protection from pelagic fish predators and are transported to juvenile crab habitats nearshore as long as associated with the cnidarian. Dungeness crab larvae feed primarily on zooplankton, however phytoplankton are also eaten. The larvae are crepuscular migrators, being found near the surface at dawn and dusk but deeper in midday and midnight. The stage 1 zoeae are nearest the surface with later zoeal stages in deeper water. In spring, larvae of this species may be advected north along the coast as far as Alaska. In springtime, adults of this crab can be found buried in sand or in tidepools, where it can hide and wait for its new shell to harden. On average, males will cover more ground in an hour than females, and ovigerous females move less than nonovigerous females or males. Near Vancouver Island, adults have more epibionts than do juveniles. Common epibionts include barnacles on the dorsal surface, green, red, and brown algae, tube-dwelling polychaetes, hydrozoans, bryozoans on any region of the carapace. A few had sponge, tunicate, or mollusk epibionts. Feeding in ovigerous females is greatly reduced below that of non-ovigerous females. Females are able to survive an entire winter without feeding, at least in the laboratory. Both juvenile and adult crabs may sometimes be cannibalistic. Dudas et al. found that the common local cancer crabs Metacarcinus magister and Cancer productus preferred the thin-shelled introduced varnish clam Nuttallia obscurata to the thicker-shelled clams Leukoma staminea and Venerupis philippinarum if access to all was equally easy. However, Nuttallia obscurata typically lives deeper in the sediment than do Leukoma staminea or Venerupis philippinarum. If they had to dig for them, Metacarcinus magister still ate more Nuttallia obscurata than it did of the other clam species, but C. productus' preference switched to Leukoma staminea and Venerupis philippinarum. Jensen and Bentzen found that the egg clutches of females frequently have multiple paternity. Adult females molt once a year and mate with one male per molt. They can store sperm for up to 2.5 years.The hoplonemertean worm Carcinonemertes errans, an ectosymbiont and egg parasite in Metacarcinus magister, is in turn eaten by a Riserius sp nemertean whose larvae have previously been classified as pilidium recurvatum
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Look Alikes

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How to Distinguish from Similar Species: The most similar-appearing local species is Metacarcinus gracilis, which has similar coloration and white claw tips as does this species. However, it has a distinct tooth behind the widest point of the carapace and has no spiny ridges on the carpus, propodus, and dactyl of the chelae. It also does not grow as large. Cancer productus, also often found intertidally and subtidally in the Pacific Northwest, has black tips to the dactyls of the chelae.Note: Species formerly in genus Cancer have been recently subdivided into several genera. Of our local genera, Cancer, Romaleon, and Metacarcinus have a carapace wider than long plus only scattered setae on the carapace margins and legs while Glebocarcinus has a carapace of approximately equal length and width, often with granular regions and with setae along the edges; and setae on the outer surface of the chela as well as on the legs. Metacarcinus can be distinguished from Cancer because Metacarcinus has anterolateral carapace teeth which are distinct and sharp plus the male has a rounded tip to the telson, while Cancer has anterolateral carapace teeth which are low and lobed, separated by deep fissures plus the male has a sharply pointed telson. Romaleon can be distinguished from Cancer and Metacarcinus because it has a distinct tooth on the anterior third of the posterolateral margin of the carapace while the other two genera do not.
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Comprehensive Description

provided by Invertebrates of the Salish Sea
A Red-brown to purple carapace with a spine-tipped edge on the front half; contains ten teeth on the anterolateral margins. The tenth tooth is the largest and is at the widest portion of the carapace. There are no teeth on the posterolateral margins. The chelipeds are purple to brownish at the base and the chelae are white at the tips. The carpus, propodus, and dactyl of the chelipeds have spiny ridges. The rear legs are more flattened than are those of most local cancer crabs, and are fringed with setae. Some hairlike setae can also be found on the underside of the carapace. This species alone accounts for the large majority of all crabs taken commercially in the Pacific Northwest. It is the largest cancer crab in North America. Width of carapace up to 25 cm in males and 18 cm in females.
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Habitat

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Depth Range: Lives from intertidal to a depth of 230 m.
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Habitat

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Most common in sand or muddy-sand bottoms in subtidal regions, often in or near eelgrass beds. Often partly buries itself in the sand.
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Metacarcinus magister ( Dutch; Flemish )

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Metacarcinus magister is een krabbensoort uit de familie van de Cancridae.[1] De wetenschappelijke naam van de soort is voor het eerst geldig gepubliceerd in 1852 door Dana.

Bronnen, noten en/of referenties
  1. Davie, P. (2012). Metacarcinus magister (Dana, 1852). Geraadpleegd via: World Register of Marine Species op http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=440388
Geplaatst op:
21-03-2013
Dit artikel is een beginnetje over biologie. U wordt uitgenodigd om op bewerken te klikken om uw kennis aan dit artikel toe te voegen. Beginnetje
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Metacarcinus magister ( Vietnamese )

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Cua Dungeness, tên khoa học Metacarcinus magister (danh pháp khoa học cũ là Cancer magister), là một loài cua sinh sống ở đáy rong zostera và tầng đáy ở bờ tây Bắc Mỹ. Nó thường có chiều ngang mai 20 cm (7,9 in) và là một hải sản phổ biến. Tên thông dụng của nó trong tiếng Anh xuất phát từ cảng Dungeness, Washington. Cua Dungeness trưởng thành có thể đạt chiều dài đến 25 cm (9,8 in) trong một số khu vực ngoài khơibờ biển của Washington, nhưng thường là dưới 20 cm (7,9 in). Chúng là một món ăn phổ biến, và là cua thương mại quan trọng nhất ở tây Bắc Thái Bình Dương, cũng như các nước phương Tây nói chung. Liên hoan cua Dungeness và hải sản hàng năm được tổ chức tại cảng Angeles mỗi tháng 10.

 src=
Cua Dungeness đã chế biến ở Bến Ngư Phủ, San Francisco

Chú thích

Tham khảo


Hình tượng sơ khai Bài viết Giáp xác mười chân này vẫn còn sơ khai. Bạn có thể giúp Wikipedia bằng cách mở rộng nội dung để bài được hoàn chỉnh hơn.
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Metacarcinus magister: Brief Summary ( Vietnamese )

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Cua Dungeness, tên khoa học Metacarcinus magister (danh pháp khoa học cũ là Cancer magister), là một loài cua sinh sống ở đáy rong zostera và tầng đáy ở bờ tây Bắc Mỹ. Nó thường có chiều ngang mai 20 cm (7,9 in) và là một hải sản phổ biến. Tên thông dụng của nó trong tiếng Anh xuất phát từ cảng Dungeness, Washington. Cua Dungeness trưởng thành có thể đạt chiều dài đến 25 cm (9,8 in) trong một số khu vực ngoài khơibờ biển của Washington, nhưng thường là dưới 20 cm (7,9 in). Chúng là một món ăn phổ biến, và là cua thương mại quan trọng nhất ở tây Bắc Thái Bình Dương, cũng như các nước phương Tây nói chung. Liên hoan cua Dungeness và hải sản hàng năm được tổ chức tại cảng Angeles mỗi tháng 10.

 src= Cua Dungeness đã chế biến ở Bến Ngư Phủ, San Francisco
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Metacarcinus magister ( Russian )

provided by wikipedia русскую Википедию

Латинское название Metacarcinus magister (Dana, 1852)[1] Синонимы
  • Cancer magister (Dana, 1852)

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Систематика
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ITIS 98675 NCBI 29965

Metacarcinus magister (лат.) (англ. Dungeness crab) — вид крабов семейства Cancridae рода Metacarcinus, обитающий на западном побережье Северной Америки.

Описание

Ширина панциря зрелого краба — около 20 см, но в некоторых районах побережья штата Вашингтон встречаются особи с шириной панциря до 25 см[2]. В области Тихоокеанского Северо-Запада и восточной части Канады, Metacarcinus magister является популярным деликатесом и самым экономически важным видом крабов в промысле[3]

Ареал

Наименование данного вида на английском«Dungeness crab» (данженесский краб) произошло в середине XX века от названия рыбацкой деревни на побережье Вашингтона — Дандженесс (Dungeness)[4]. Ареал Metacarcinus magister простирается от Алеутских островов Аляски до Калифорнии[5].

Примечания

  1. Peter K. L. Ng, Danièle Guinot & Peter J. F. Davie (2008). “Systema Brachyurorum: Part I. An annotated checklist of extant Brachyuran crabs of the world” (PDF). Raffles Bulletin of Zoology. 17: 1—286. Проверено 2011-01-03. (англ.)
  2. 2006-2007 Fishing in Washington Rule Pamphlet (pdf), p. 130. (англ.)
  3. Species Fact Sheet. Cancer magister Dana, 1852 (неопр.). FAO (January 22, 2004). Проверено 3 января 2011. Архивировано 9 июля 2012 года. (англ.)
  4. The Dungeness Crab (неопр.). Dungeness community website. Проверено 2011.01.03. Архивировано 9 июля 2012 года.
  5. Seafood Watch Dungeness Crab Report (неопр.) (PDF). Monterey Bay Aquarium. Проверено 3 января 2011. Архивировано 9 июля 2012 года. (англ.)


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Metacarcinus magister: Brief Summary ( Russian )

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Metacarcinus magister (лат.) (англ. Dungeness crab) — вид крабов семейства Cancridae рода Metacarcinus, обитающий на западном побережье Северной Америки.

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首長黃道蟹 ( Chinese )

provided by wikipedia 中文维基百科
二名法 Cancer magister
Dana, 1852

首長黃道蟹Cancer magister),又名邓杰内斯蟹鄧金斯螃蟹珍寶蟹唐金蟹黃金蟹鄧津蟹,是黃道蟹科黃道蟹屬的一個蟹種,通常栖息于从阿拉斯加阿留申群岛到美国加州圣塔克鲁兹Santa Cruz)漫草丛生的海床及水底[1],可食用,是北美洲西海岸盛產的一種食用蟹[2]。這種蟹得名於美国华盛顿州的老镇邓杰内斯[1],位於史魁恩以北8公里,安吉利斯港以東25公里。

特徵

 src=
頭部特寫

蟹殼背部呈淡紅至棕色,有些前面有紫色斑 點,下腹為白色至淡橘色,蟹鉗為白色,最後尾節尖端呈圓形。大部分的重量為680克至1.4公斤。Cancer gracilis 大概是唯一容易和首長黃道蟹搞混的種類,兩者的螯端皆為白色。不過,首長黃道蟹的螯是明顯的鋸齒狀;C. gracilis的螯則較平滑。另外,首長黃道蟹步足的末三節有毛,C. gracilis 則無毛。

生態

在华盛顿州附近海域,邓杰内斯蟹的直径可达25厘米,但通常直径小于20厘米。日常在市場上可以買得到的蟹,最小的也有兩磅重[2]。由於蟹的蟹甲宽而坚硬,邓杰内斯蟹在第一年需更换6次蟹甲,第二年需再更换6次蟹甲才能達到性成熟。它的主要食物包括蚌类、小型甲壳类动物和小鱼,但它也可以腐食为生;食物短缺時,也會出現同類相食的現象。天敵包括章魚、大型魚類、海獺和人類。在受到天敌威胁时,它可完全藏於沙中。

在交配季节,雄蟹受到雌蟹尿液中的信息素吸引而寻找雌蟹。雌雄蟹在交配前会拥抱数天。雌蟹在交配的数月以后产卵,雌蟹在交配後可攜帶 50 ~ 200萬顆卵。这些卵会附着在雌蟹的腹部三到五月,直至孵化。新生的小蟹即会游泳。在出生后的两年当中,小蟹要经历约十次蜕壳才能成为成年蟹。

商業捕蟹與保育

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舊金山漁人碼頭街頭的螃蟹小吃

首長黃道蟹的蟹肉质鲜美,是東北太平洋沿岸重要的商业蟹类。單是加州中部 (舊金山、蒙特利地區) 的魚場,一年平均便可捕獲200萬磅。

商業捕蟹僅限於尺寸6 ¼ 英寸 (15.9 公分) 或更大的雄蟹。雌蟹需立即釋放。這確保螃蟹一年至少有一次繁殖季。捕蟹季通常開始於12月1日,當蟹殼已經長硬,這表示殼內已經長好結實的肌肉。在捕撈季開始前會有測試,確定螃蟹平均至少有25% 的蟹肉含量。蟹肉含量一般由13 - 30%不等,取決於脫殼及繁殖時間和環境因素,如食物和海洋條件等。此蟹全年都可在加拿大海域捕獲,尤以五月至十月為量產。

肉質細嫩、味道鮮美,帶有淡淡堅果香味,身體部位肉質滑嫩,腳肉較為紮實,主要原因是黃金蟹可以不同方向的移動,而且必要時可以相當快速。可煎、 炸、蒸、煮,或與其他海鮮混合烹調。通常以活蟹方式運送至全球各地,也有以加工及新鮮現煮或去殼蟹肉方式販售。

可持續海鮮評級機構“Seafood Watch”對於現時首長黃道蟹的保育給予了「最佳選擇」('Best Choice')的評價[3]

2009年,來自俄勒岡州西北部克拉克默斯縣西林恩日落小學學生的游說,基於首長黃道蟹對俄勒岡州經濟的重要性,建議把首長黃道蟹訂定為「州蟹」;議案於2009年尾通過[4]

參考資料

  1. ^ 1.0 1.1 The Dungeness Crab. Dungeness community website. [2006-08-28].
  2. ^ 2.0 2.1 引用错误:没有为名为rthk的参考文献提供内容
  3. ^ Seafood Recommendations: Dungeness Crab. Seafood WATCH. [2009-12-19]. (原始内容存档于2010-07-06).
  4. ^ House Joint Resolution 37, 2009 (Enrolled). Oregon State Legislature. [2009-10-23]. (原始内容存档于2011-06-11).
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首長黃道蟹: Brief Summary ( Chinese )

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首長黃道蟹(Cancer magister),又名邓杰内斯蟹、鄧金斯螃蟹、珍寶蟹、唐金蟹、黃金蟹或鄧津蟹,是黃道蟹科黃道蟹屬的一個蟹種,通常栖息于从阿拉斯加阿留申群岛到美国加州圣塔克鲁兹(Santa Cruz)漫草丛生的海床及水底,可食用,是北美洲西海岸盛產的一種食用蟹。這種蟹得名於美国华盛顿州的老镇邓杰内斯,位於史魁恩以北8公里,安吉利斯港以東25公里。

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アメリカイチョウガニ ( Japanese )

provided by wikipedia 日本語
アメリカイチョウガニ DungenessCrab.jpg
アメリカイチョウガニ
分類 : 動物界 Animal : 節足動物門 Arthropod 亜門 : 甲殻亜門 Crustacean : 軟甲綱 Malacostraca 亜綱 : 真軟甲亜綱 Eumalacostraca 上目 : ホンエビ上目 Eucarida : 十脚目 Decapoda 亜目 : 抱卵亜目 Pleocyemata 下目 : 短尾下目 Brachyura : イチョウガニ科 Cancroidea : Metacarcinus属 Metacarcinus : アメリカイチョウガニ Metacarcinus magister 学名 Metacarcinus magister Dana, 1852[1] シノニム

Cancer magister Dana, 1852[1]

英名 Dungeness crab

アメリカイチョウガニ(ダンジネスクラブ、学名Metacarcinus magister)は十脚目イチョウガニ科に分類されるカニ北アメリカ西海岸のアマモが群生する海底に生息するカニで、重要な食用種である。幅20cmほどの大きさに成長する。ワシントン州の港町ダンジネスから水揚げされるため、この通称で呼ばれる。

脚注[編集]

  1. ^ a b Peter K. L. Ng, Danièle Guinot & Peter J. F. Davie (2008). “Systema Brachyurorum: Part I. An annotated checklist of extant Brachyuran crabs of the world” (PDF). Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 17: 1–286. http://rmbr.nus.edu.sg/rbz/biblio/s17/s17rbz.pdf.
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ウィキペディアの著者と編集者
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wikipedia 日本語

アメリカイチョウガニ: Brief Summary ( Japanese )

provided by wikipedia 日本語

アメリカイチョウガニ(ダンジネスクラブ、学名Metacarcinus magister)は十脚目イチョウガニ科に分類されるカニ北アメリカ西海岸のアマモが群生する海底に生息するカニで、重要な食用種である。幅20cmほどの大きさに成長する。ワシントン州の港町ダンジネスから水揚げされるため、この通称で呼ばれる。

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ウィキペディアの著者と編集者
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wikipedia 日本語