Dotilla myctiroides
Appearance
Dotilla myctiroides | |
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Dotilla myctiroides from Devbagh, Karwar, India | |
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Genus: | Dotilla
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Species: | myctiroides
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Binomial name | |
Dotilla myctiroides (H. Milne-Edwards, 1852)[1]
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Dotilla myctiroides is a species of sand bubbler crab found on sea coasts in tropical Asia and East Asia, from Karachi to Japan.[2] They breed throughout the year but activity peaks during the monsoons. This species builds a burrow, called an "igloo", in unstable sand as well as in well-drained and firm sand. In building the igloo, the crab excavates sand and forms it into spherical pellets. These pellets are used to form a circular wall and roof in the burrow. The resulting structure holds a small amount of air in addition to the crab itself.[3]
References
- ^ Davie, P. (2012). "Dotilla myctiroides (H. Milne Edwards, 1852)". World Register of Marine Species op. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
- ^ Alcock, Alfred (1900). "Materials for a Carcinological Fauna of India, No. 6: The Brachyura Catometopa, or Grapsoidea". Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. 69 (3). Baptist Mission Press: 368–369. OCLC 18349194.
- ^ Takeda, Satoshi; Matsumasa, Masatoshi; Yong, Hoi-Sen; Murai, Minoru (1996). ""Igloo" construction by the ocypodid crab, Dotilla myctiroides (Milne-Edwards) (Crustacea; Brachyura): The role of an air chamber when burrowing in a saturated sandy substratum". Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology. 198 (2). ElSevier: 237–247. doi:10.1016/0022-0981(96)00007-X.
External links
- Media related to Ocypode africana at Wikimedia Commons