Libinia emarginata
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Libinia emarginata, the portly spider crab, common spider crab or nine-spined spider crab, is a species of stenohaline crab that lives on the Atlantic coast of North America.
DistributionEdit
Libinia emarginata occurs from Nova Scotia to the Florida Keys and through the Gulf of Mexico.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> It lives at depths of up to Template:Convert, with exceptional records of up to Template:Convert.<ref name="Martinez"/>
DescriptionEdit
Libinia emarginata is roughly triangular in outline and very heavily calcified, with a carapace about Template:Convert long and a leg span of Template:Convert.<ref name="Martinez"/> The whole crab is khaki, and the carapace is covered in spines and tubercles,<ref name="Lippson">Template:Cite book</ref> and, as with other decorator crabs, often clothes itself in debris and small invertebrates.<ref name="Martinez"/>
ReproductionEdit
Mating takes place, and eggs are produced from June to September. The eggs are initially a bright orange-red, but turn brown during development, which takes around 25 days. The eggs then hatch as zoea larvae, and the female can produce another brood of eggs within 12 hours, unlike many other crab species whose females only mate immediately after molting.<ref name="Hirsch">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Similar speciesEdit
Libinia emarginata is very similar to Libinia dubia with which it is largely sympatric. They can be told apart by examining the row of spines along the center of the carapace: in L. emarginata there are nine, while in L. dubia there are only six.<ref name="Lippson"/> Also, the rostrum of L. dubia is more deeply forked than that of L. emarginata.<ref name="Martinez">Template:Cite book</ref>
Ecology and behaviorEdit
Libinia emarginata lives on various substrates, at depths of up to Template:Convert. Adults are sluggish and not aggressive, and younger crabs are frequently covered with sponges and hydroids.<ref name="Lippson"/>
Despite its small size, in comparison to other predatory crabs, L. emarginata feeds on large starfish such as Asterias forbesi.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Unusually for crabs, L. emarginata preferentially walks forwards, rather than sideways, although they are also capable of sidelong movement.<ref name="Vidal09">Template:Cite journal</ref> Its skeletal,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> muscular<ref name="Vidal09"/> and neural anatomy<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> more closely resembles that of forward-walking species, rather than that of more closely related sideways-walking species.
L. emarginata will mate in large aggregations.<ref name=RRR10126>Template:Cite journal</ref> These aggregations may function as a protective mechanism during reproduction.<ref name=RRR10126/> Males of L. emarginata show an unusual "obstetrical behavior", in which gravid females who are about to release their larvae are held behind the male and aggressively protected.<ref name="Hirsch"/>