Tenuibranchiurus: Difference between revisions
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The '''swamp crayfish''', ''Tenuibranchiurus glypticus'', is a tiny freshwater [[crayfish]] that occurs in [[freshwater]] waterways in [[Queensland]], and is the smallest known species of crayfish. The [[species]] is the only member of the [[genus]] ''Tenuibranchiurus'', and the characteristics that distinguish it are its small size (adults are on average 25 [[millimetre|mm]] long) and its [[claw]]s which open vertically rather than horizontally or obliquely. |
The '''swamp crayfish''', ''Tenuibranchiurus glypticus'', is a tiny freshwater [[crayfish]] that occurs in [[freshwater]] waterways in [[Queensland]], and is the smallest known species of crayfish. The [[species]] is the only member of the [[genus]] ''Tenuibranchiurus'', and the characteristics that distinguish it are its small size (adults are on average 25 [[millimetre|mm]] long) and its [[claw]]s which open vertically rather than horizontally or obliquely. |
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The Swamp Crayfish lives in areas which are not very well drained, where pools dry up seasonally every winter. Much of the year is spent in communities in extraordinary underground networks of chambers and tunnels which can be up to 1.5 m below the surface. |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 08:44, 8 February 2008
Swamp crayfish | |
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Genus: | Tenuibranchiurus
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Species: | T.
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Binomial name | |
Tenuibranchiurus glypticus Riek, 1951
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The swamp crayfish, Tenuibranchiurus glypticus, is a tiny freshwater crayfish that occurs in freshwater waterways in Queensland, and is the smallest known species of crayfish. The species is the only member of the genus Tenuibranchiurus, and the characteristics that distinguish it are its small size (adults are on average 25 mm long) and its claws which open vertically rather than horizontally or obliquely.
The Swamp Crayfish lives in areas which are not very well drained, where pools dry up seasonally every winter. Much of the year is spent in communities in extraordinary underground networks of chambers and tunnels which can be up to 1.5 m below the surface.