dcsimg
Creatures » » Animal » » Arthropods » » Typical Crustaceans » Malacostracans » » Decapods » » Atyidae »

Kentucky Cave Shrimp

Palaemonias ganteri Hay 1901

Comprehensive Description

provided by Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology
Palaemonias ganteri Hay

Palaemonias ganteri Hay, 1901:180; 1902a:226–230, fig. la–k.—Calman, 1909:93.—Kemp, 1912:115.—Ortmann, 1918:838, 845, fig. 1311.—Spandl, 1926:94, 141, 181.—Wolf, 1934:102.—Edmondson, 1935:15.—Woltereck, 1937:327.—Chace, 1943:30, 32; 1954:323; 1959:879, fig. 31.8.—Pennak, 1953:458, 466.—Dearolf, 1953:228.—Holthuis, 1955, fig. 8b; 1956a:50–51.—Nicholas, 1960:134.—Vandel, 1964:178; 1965:139.—Barr, 1967a:161, 162, 187, 192, pl. 47; 1968:60, 85, 95, fig. 15.—Poulson and Smith, 1969:199.—Anonymous, 1970:120.—Barr and Kuehne, 1971:81, 85.—Cooper and Cooper, 1974:48.—Burukovskii, 1974, fig. 84a.—Hedgpeth, 1975:1.—Monod, 1975:99, fig. 1.

Palaemonias.—Hay, 1902a:227, 229, 230.—Bolivar and Jeannel, 1931:306, 307.—Fage, 1931:362, 372, 373; 1932:646, 649.—Chace, 1942:101.—Jeannel, 1943:271, 272.—Balss, 1955:1310.—Barr, 1967a:190.—Barr and Kuehne, 1971:85–87.

Pataemonias ganteri.—Anonymous, 1904:691 [erroneous spelling].

Palaemonias Ganteri.—Bouvier, 1925:74, figs. 120–127.—Chappuis, 1927:89, 152.—Fage, 1931:362–371, figs. 1–21; 1932: 646.—Jeannel, 1943:271.—Roth-Woltereck, 1955:197, 198.

Palaemonies ganteri.—Giovannoli, 1933a:620 [erroneous spelling].

Crevettes.—Jeannel, 1950:59.

Paleomonetes ganteri.—Poulson, 1964:752 [lapsus calami].

Palaemonias ganteri.—Barr and Kuehne, 1971:86 [lapsus calami].

Atyid shrimps.—Barr and Kuehne, 1971:94.

DIAGNOSIS.—Rostrum with ventral teeth and more than 15 dorsal teeth. Third maxilliped with flexor surface of distal podomere bearing more than 12 rows of plumose setae, followed by row of no fewer than 4 spiniform setae. First pleopod with mesial margin of endopod bearing fewer than 10 setae. Appendix masculina studded with more than 15 spinelike setae.

SIZE.—Total length 23 mm (Barr and Kuehne, 1971:86); postorbital carapace length 6.7 mm (J. E. Cooper, 1975).

TYPES.—Syntypes, USNM 27000.

TYPE-LOCALITY.—Roaring River, Mammoth Cave, Edmonson County, Kentucky, U.S.A.

RANGE.—U.S.A. Known only from the type-locality and “the Golden Triangle area in the lower levels of Crystal Cave in Flint Ridge [Mammoth-Flint Ridge System]. The cave guides report that shrimps were formerly occasionally seen in a pool near the Fourth Landing on Echo River [Mammoth Cave],” (Barr, 1967a:162).

ECOLOGICAL
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
bibliographic citation
Hobbs, Horton Holcombe, Jr., Hobbs, Horton Holcombe, III, and Daniel, M. A. 1977. "A Review of the Troglobitic Decapod Crustaceans of the Americas." Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology. 1-183. https://doi.org/10.5479/si.00810282.244

Kentucky cave shrimp

provided by wikipedia EN

The Kentucky cave shrimp (Palaemonias ganteri) is an eyeless, troglobite shrimp. It lives in caves in Barren County, Edmonson County, Hart County and Warren County, Kentucky.[2] The shrimp's shell has no pigment; the species is nearly transparent and closely resembles its nearest relative, the Alabama cave shrimp.

The habitat of the Kentucky cave shrimp is exclusively in underground streams of caves. It is endemic to the Mammoth Cave National Park region of central Kentucky. The shrimp feeds mainly on sediments that are washed into the cave by the movement of groundwater.

Conservation

The Kentucky cave shrimp was registered as an endangered species under the Endangered Species Act in 1983,[3] and was included on the IUCN Red List as Endangered in 1994.[1] There are currently only several thousand remaining. It is mostly threatened by contaminated groundwater running into its habitat.[2] Several nearby communities either have inadequate sewage treatment facilities or lack such facilities altogether. An additional potential threat is the entry of contaminants from traffic accidents and roadside businesses. One incident in 1979 caused the death of aquatic cave organisms in a part of the Mammoth Cave system, and in a 1980 incident, a truck carrying toxic cyanide salts overturned on Interstate 65, just south of Mammoth Cave National Park.

A recovery plan is underway[4] which includes:

  1. Surveying the location and extent of all areas supporting shrimp
  2. Conducting life history and other research required to determine what constitutes a viable population
  3. Monitoring population status
  4. Maintaining adequate water quality;
  5. Protecting the shrimp from introduced predators
  6. Producing and conducting public education programs.

References

  1. ^ a b De Grave, S.; Rogers, C. (2013). "Palaemonias ganteri". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2013: e.T15888A788947. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2013-1.RLTS.T15888A788947.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b Tim Slone; Traci Wethington, eds. (1998). "Kentucky Cave Shrimp, Palaemonias ganteri". Kentucky's Threatened and Endangered Species (2001 ed.). Frankfort, Kentucky: Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. pp. 17–18. Archived from the original on October 8, 2010.
  3. ^ "Kentucky Cave shrimp (Palaemonias ganteri) species profile". Environmental Conservation Online System. United States Fish and Wildlife Service. October 15, 2010.
  4. ^ Harley, Stephen A. Miller, John P. (2002). Zoology 5th edition (5th ed.). Boston [etc.]: McGraw-Hill. p. 119. ISBN 978-0070294110.
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EN

Kentucky cave shrimp: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

The Kentucky cave shrimp (Palaemonias ganteri) is an eyeless, troglobite shrimp. It lives in caves in Barren County, Edmonson County, Hart County and Warren County, Kentucky. The shrimp's shell has no pigment; the species is nearly transparent and closely resembles its nearest relative, the Alabama cave shrimp.

The habitat of the Kentucky cave shrimp is exclusively in underground streams of caves. It is endemic to the Mammoth Cave National Park region of central Kentucky. The shrimp feeds mainly on sediments that are washed into the cave by the movement of groundwater.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EN