Английская Википедия:Grimothea planipes

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Grimothea planipes, also known as the pelagic red crab, red crab, or tuna crab, is a species of squat lobster from the eastern Pacific Ocean.

Description

Grimothea planipes is a bright red animal, up to Шаблон:Convert long.[1] It resembles a true lobster, but has a shorter abdomen.[2]

Distribution

Grimothea planipes lives on the continental shelf west of Mexico.[3] It is usually found only south-west of San Diego,[1] but in warmer years, its range may extend northwards into California.[3] This is usually indicative of an El Niño event.[4] Adults migrate vertically to near the ocean surface and large numbers occasionally wash up on beaches during warm water events.[3] The southern limit of the species' range is in Chile.[5]

Life cycle

The life cycle of Grimothea planipes appeared for a long time to form a paradox: while an adult population was maintained along the south-western coast of the United States, the planktonic larvae they released were immediately swept by the California Current thousands of miles out to sea. A solution was proposed whereby the larvae use an opposing undercurrent at a lower depth to return to the continental shelf, and this hypothesis was confirmed by sampling different depths of water with a plankton recorder.[6]

Ecology

Файл:Grimothea planipes - MBA.webm
Pelagic red crab (Grimothea planipes)

Grimothea planipes usually feeds on protists and zooplankton, but will feed by filtering blooms of diatoms.[7]

As the most abundant species of micronekton in the California Current, Grimothea planipes fills an important ecological niche converting primary production into energy that larger organisms can use.[8] G. planipes is accordingly an important food item for many species of birds, marine mammals and fish. It is favoured by tuna, leading to one of the species' common names – "tuna crab".[1] Other fish known to feed on G. planipes include billfishes, yellowtail amberjack, sharks[9] and Epinephelus analogus.[10] The diets of gray whales,[11] Bryde's whales,[12] blue whales[12] and sea otters[13] all include G. planipes. The Mexican endemic bat Myotis vivesi also feeds on G. planipes at some times of the year.[14] Off Baja California, the stomachs of some loggerhead sea turtles have been observed to contain only G. planipes.[15] Since G. planipes may be washed ashore in large numbers, it can be a valuable addition to the diets of seabirds such as the herring gull (Larus argentuatus), whose food supply is usually diminished in El Niño years.[16]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

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