Australian Biological Resources Study

Australian Faunal Directory

<em>Lithodes murrayi</em [from Henderson 1888: pl. 4 fig. 1]

Lithodes murrayi

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Family LITHODIDAE Samouelle, 1819

 

Introduction

The king crabs or stone crabs occur worldwide and are largely deep-water species, although several occur in shallow water at high latitudes, especially in the North Pacific. Around 135 species are known of which more than 60 occur in the Pacific Ocean. King crabs are best known from several commercially important northern hemisphere species. One species, Paralithodes camtschatica (Tilesius), for a long time has been the basis of a very important fishery in the North Pacific.

Lithodids differ from other paguroids in being crab-like, not inhabiting gastropod shells and in having a usually flattened, calcified pleon. Lithodids closely resemble brachyuran crabs but notably differ in having only three pairs of walking legs and an asymmetrical pleon in females. No other decapods more closely approximate the brachyuran form than do lithodids, being the paradigm example of carcinisation, that is, the evolution of a crab-like form from a non-crab ancestor. The family is divided into two subfamilies - only Lihodinae occur in Australia. Hapalogastrinae Brandt, 1850 is confined to the temperate North Pacific.

Lithodids are relatively rare in Australian waters, with only one species, Lithodes murrayi Henderson, 1888, moderately well known from southern Australian waters. Dawson & Yaldwyn (1985) and Dawson (1989) are invaluable reference works for the study of the Lithodidae. Ahyong (2010) revised the King Crabs of Australasian waters.

 

Diagnosis

Crab-like. Maxilliped 1 exopod with flagellum. Maxillipeds 3 widely separate at base. Epistomial spines absent. Chelipeds equal or unequal, right usually larger. Pereopods 2–4 ambulatory. Pleon asymmetrical in females, symmetrical in males; terga membranous or composed of calcified plates and nodules; pleonite 1 strongly reduced; pleonites 2–6 well-developed. Pleopods 2–5 unpaired in females, absent in males. Uropod absent.

 

History of changes

Note that this list may be incomplete for dates prior to September 2013.
Published As part of group Action Date Action Type Compiler(s)
13-Mar-2025 CRUSTACEA Brünnich, 1772 19-Jan-2025 MODIFIED Dr Gary Poore
05-Dec-2019 DECAPODA Latreille, 1802 07-Mar-2019 MODIFIED Dr Shane Ahyong
24-Apr-2012 24-Apr-2012 MODIFIED
12-Feb-2010 (import)