Hapalogaster dentata

Hapalogaster dentata
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Malacostraca
Order: Decapoda
Suborder: Pleocyemata
Infraorder: Anomura
Family: Lithodidae
Genus: Hapalogaster
Species:
H. dentata
Binomial name
Hapalogaster dentata
(De Haan, 1849)[1]

Hapalogaster dentata, also called the stone crab or the spiny stone crab,[2][3] is a species of king crab. It is found in shallow waters in the Yellow Sea on the western Korean Peninsula, the Sea of Japan near Peter the Great Gulf, and along the coast of Japan as far north as Hokkaido and as far south as Kyushu.[4][5]

References

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  1. ^ De Haan, Wilhem. "Crustacea". In Siebold, Philipp Franz Balthazar von (ed.). Fauna Japonica sive Descriptio Animalium, quae in Itinere per Japoniam, Jußu et Auspiciis Superiorum, qui Summum in India Batava Imperium Tenent, Suscepto, Annis 1823–1830 Collegit, Notis, Observationibus et Adumbrationibus Illustravit (in French). pp. 219–220 – via WoRMS.
  2. ^ Sato, Taku; Goshima, Seiji (October 2007). "Sperm allocation in response to a temporal gradient in female reproductive quality in the stone crab, Hapalogaster dentata". Animal Behaviour. 74 (4): 903–910. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2006.09.027.
  3. ^ Crowley, Claire E.; Gandy, Ryan L.; Daly, Kendra L.; Leone, Erin Hoerl (November 2018). "Assessment of maturity in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico Florida stone crab Menippe mercenaria fishery". Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. 147 (6): 1124–1145. doi:10.1002/tafs.10109. [...] spiny stone crab Hapalogaster dentata [...]
  4. ^ Soo, Rho Hyun; Won, Kim (September 2004). "Marine decapods of Gugnsan Islands". Korean Journal of Environmental Biology. 22 (3): 456–463. ISSN 1226-9999.
  5. ^ Korn, Olga M.; Golubinskaya, Darya D.; Sharina, Svetlana N.; Noever, Christoph; Glenner, Henrik (2024). "Rhizocephalan barnacle Briarosaccus hoegi sp. nov. – a parasite of the stone crab Hapalogaster dentata (De Haan, 1849) from Peter the Great Bay (Sea of Japan)". Zoological Studies. 63: 29. doi:10.6620/ZS.2024.63-29.
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