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Biology

provided by Arctic Ocean Biodiversity 2011
A very common harvested spider crab of Arctic shelf seas
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Arctic Ocean Diversity
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Mary Wicksten

Comprehensive Description

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Light brick red above, may be iridescent, below yellowish white; sides of legs white; Carapace about as long as wide, tuberculate (bumpy) with prominences becoming more acute anteriorly and at sides, rostrum short; Chelipeds (pinchers) short; Merus (upper part) of walking leg rather flat and dilated
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Arctic Ocean Diversity
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Trophic Strategy

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Scavenger, predator on annelid worms, crustaceans, brittle stars and mollusks
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Arctic Ocean Diversity
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Life Cycle

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Like related spider crabs (superfamily Majoidea), snow crabs go through a final molt before they mate and die; Fertilization is internal; Females carry up to 150,000 fertilized eggs under the abdomen; Hatching coincides with the major plankton bloom of late spring or early summer; They hatch as pelagic zoeal stages, metamorphose into megalops stages and settle to the sea floor; The life span is 5-6 years; More Biology and Ecology; Snow crabs are related to tanner crabs (C. tanneri) and similar species found in cold northern seas; Can be caught in large numbers, their relatively thin exoskeleton compared to other spider crabs make a desired ccomercial species; A good general source of information is "Snow crab: a successful fishery" by Chadwick & Moriyasu, 1996; Two gammarid amphipods, Ischyrocerus commensalis and Gammaropsis inaequistylis, have been found living on the carapace of the snow crab off Newfoundland
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Arctic Ocean Diversity
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Mary Wicksten

Habitat

provided by Arctic Ocean Biodiversity 2011
Mud, sand and shell, 13-2187 m; Most records are from no more than 110 m; Disagreement remains whether different populations represent valid subspecies
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Arctic Ocean Diversity
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Diagnostic Description

provided by FAO species catalogs
Carapace nearly as wide as long, with moderately calcified integument presenting tubercles and hooked setae; rostrum horizontal, short and wide with two flat-pointed horns separated by a gap. Shallow open orbits with a dorsal fisure having a triangular spine. Gastric region depressed and well separated from the branchial region. Postero-lateral border with parallel grooves and edge rows of granules interrupted at intestinal region. First 3 walking legs compressed, with long merus, clearly longer than chelipeds. Chelipeds slender, shorter or equal in lenght to walking legs. Colour brownish to light brick-red above, often iridescent, below yellowish-white; sides of feet shining white.

References

  • Comeau, M., G.Y. Conan, F. Maynou, G. Robichaud, J.-C. Therriault & M. Starr1998Growth, spatial distribution, and abundance of benthic stages of the snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio) in Bonne Bay, Newfoundland, Canada.Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 55: 262-279.
  • Elner, R.W. 1985. Crabs of the Atlantic coast of Canada. DFO Underwater World Factsheet UW/43.
  • Rathbun, M.J. 1925. The spider crabs of America. Smithsonian Institution Press. Washington, D.C. 613 p.
  • Sakai, T. 1976. Crabs of Japan and the adjacent seas. Kodansha Ltd. Tokyo773 pp.
  • Squires, H.J.1990Decapoda Crustacea of the Atlantic Coast of Canada. Canadian Bulletin of Fisheries and Aquatic sciences. 221:532 p.
  • Starr, M., J.C. Therriault, G.Y. Conan, M. Comeau & G. Robichaud. 1994Larval release in a sub-euphotic zone invertebrate triggered by sinking phytoplankton particles. Journal of Plankton Research. 16: 1137-1147 pp.
  • Taylor, D.M., R.G. Hooper & G.P. Ennis -1985 Biological aspects of snow crab, Chionoecetes opilio, in Bonne Bay, Newfoundland (Canada).Fishery Bulletin. 83: 707-711 pp.
  • Vera, J. -1992 Diccionario multilingüe de especies marinas para el mundo hispano.Ministerio de Agricultura, Pesca y Alimentación. Secretaria General Técnica. 1282 pp.

Distribution

provided by FAO species catalogs
Western Atlantic from Greenland, Newfoundland to the Gulf of Maine. Noth Pacific: from Arctic Alaska westward to northern Siberia and southward through the Bering Strait to the Aleutian Islands, Kamchatka, Okhotsk, Japan and Korea. Rathbun (1924) recognized a different subespecies (Chionoecetes opilio elongatus) from the Pacific (see remarks).

Size

provided by FAO species catalogs
CW of males reaching 150 mm and 90 mm for females. Common range sizes between 89-140 mm cw (males) and 55-86 mm cw (females).

Brief Summary

provided by FAO species catalogs
A benthicshelf and upper slope species, inhabiting sand or muddy bottoms over depths ranging between 20-1200 m, with higher abundance from 70-280 m in the Atlantic populations.Minimum size of maturity: 51 mm CW (carapace width) for males; 41 mm CW for females. Males and females are segregated over most of the year, males occurring on mud bottoms in deep waters whereas females occurr on sand-graverl or rocky bottoms shallower. High reproductive potential: 100% of females carrying eggs each year. Synchronism between the bottom deposition of phytodetritus and larval release was experimentally demonstrated in this species. Feeding on a wide variety of benthic invertebrates: crustaceans (shrimps, crabs, amphipods, isopods), bivalves, brittle stars, polychaetes, etc. Small specimens consume phytobenthos and foraminiferans.

Benefits

provided by FAO species catalogs
Caught commercially with traps, although in origin by trawling as by-catch in groundfish fisheries. Fishery areas in the south and west of St. Lawrence Bay, and east and southeast of Newfounland and southern Labrador. Fisheries since 1960 peaking in 1982 and 1983 (47000 and 37000 t respectively). The effects of directing the fishery exclusively at males larger than 95 mm CW on the snow crab population are not yet fully understood. The total catch reported for this species to FAO for 1999 was 95 704 t. The countries with the largest catches were Canada (95 115 t) and St. Pierre and Miquelon (589 t).

Chionoecetes opilio

provided by wikipedia EN

Chionoecetes opilio, a species of snow crab, also known as opilio crab or opies, is a predominantly epifaunal crustacean native to shelf depths in the northwest Atlantic Ocean and north Pacific Ocean. It is a well-known commercial species of Chionoecetes, often caught with traps or by trawling. Seven species are in the genus Chionoecetes, all of which bear the name "snow crab". C. opilio is related to C. bairdi, commonly known as the tanner crab, and other crab species found in the cold, northern oceans.

Anatomy

Snow crabs have equally long and wide carapaces, or protective shell-coverings, over their bodies. Their tubercles, or the bodily projections on their shells, are moderately enclosed in calcium deposits, and they boast hooked setae, which are rigid, yet springy, hair-like organs on their claws. Snow crabs have a horizontal rostrum at the front of the carapace; the rostrum is basically just an extension of the hard, shell covering of the carapace and it boasts two flat horns separated by a gap. They have triangular spines and well-defined gastric and branchial regions internally.[2] Snow crabs also have little granules along the border of their bodies, except their intestinal region. Concerning their walking legs, their first three are compressed; their chelipeds, or pincers, are usually smaller, shorter, or equal to their walking legs.[3] Snow crabs are iridescent and range in color from brown to light red on top and from yellow to white on the bottom,[1] and are bright white on the sides of their feet.[4]

Distribution and habitat

Snow crabs are native to the Northwest Atlantic and the North Pacific. In the Northwest Atlantic, they are found in the areas near Greenland, Newfoundland, in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and on the Scotian Shelf.[2] In the North Pacific, this crab is found in areas ranging from Alaska to northern Siberia, and through the Bering Strait to the Aleutian Islands, Japan, and Korea.[5]

In 1996, they were recorded in the Barents Sea for the first time. They are considered an invasive species there, but how they arrived there is unclear.[6] Another commercially important species, introduced deliberately to the same region, the red king crab, already has established itself in Barents Sea. Similarly, snow crabs likely will have an adverse effect on the native species of the Barents Sea.[6]

Snow crabs are found in the ocean's shelf and upper slope, on sandy and muddy bottoms.[3] They are found at depths from 13 to 2,187 m (43 to 7,175 ft), but average is about 110 m (360 ft).[7] In Atlantic waters, most snow crabs are found at depths of 70–280 m (230–920 ft).[3] Where male and female snow crabs are found in the ocean, depths may vary. Small adult and senescent adult males occur mainly at intermediate depths over much of the year, while large and hardy adult males are found mostly at depths greater than 80 m (260 ft). Adult females are gregarious and congregate at depths of 60–120 m (200–390 ft). Snow crabs mainly reside in very cold waters, between −1 and 5 °C (30 and 41 °F), but can be found at temperatures up to 10 °C (50 °F).[7]

Diet

Chionoecetes opilio crabs eat other invertebrates in the benthic shelf, such as crustaceans, bivalves, brittle stars, polychaetes, and even phytobenthos and foraminiferans. Snow crabs also are scavengers, and aside from preying on other benthic shelf invertebrates, they prey on annelid worms and mollusks. Males typically prove to be better predators than mature females, and prey type depends upon predator size, with the smallest crabs feeding mainly on amphipods and ophiuroids, while the largest crabs feed mainly on annelids, crustacean decapods, and fish.[8] Cannibalism is practised at times among snow crabs, most frequently by intermediate-sized females.

Size and population structure

Two snow crabs with the larger male perched on top of the female, Bonne Bay, Newfoundland, Canada

The snow crab grows slowly and is structured according to its size. At least 11 stages of growth for male crabs are recognized. Usually, the male crabs are almost twice the size of the female crabs.[4] Males can grow up to 16.5 cm (6.5 in) in carapace width, while females can grow up to 9.5 cm (3.7 in).[7] Male carapaces are usually about 7 cm (2.8 in) in width and length, with the female carapace usually close to 5.5 cm (2.2 in) in width and length.[4] Males caught in commercial fisheries generally weigh 0.5–1.35 kg (1.1–3.0 lb) and females generally about 0.5 kg (1.1 lb).[7]

Off the coast of Newfoundland, two amphipod species – Ischyrocerus commensalis and Gammaropsis inaequistylis – have been found to live on the carapace of the snow crab.[9]

Breeding patterns

Snow crabs have a very high reproductive potential; each year, every female carries eggs. Females are fertilised internally and can carry up to 150,000 eggs under their abdomens after mating. Females usually lay their eggs in very deep areas of the ocean, such as in deposits of phytodetritus. Males also are capable of mating at both immature and mature stages of their lives.[10]

Snow crabs have an average lifespan of 14 to 16 years. Before their deaths, they usually moult, mate a final time, and die. New snow crab offspring hatch along with the late spring phytoplankton bloom, so they have an ample food source to take advantage of upon hatching. When they hatch, they are in the zoeal stage, meaning that they are developing into larvae that can swim on their own. Then, they metamorphose into the megalopa stage and settle to the ocean floor among the phytodetritus.

Commercial importance

This species of crab was commonly caught by trappers in the 1980s, but trapping has decreased since then. Much of the trapping has been in Canada for commercial use.[11] The first commercial fishing for the species in the Barents Sea (where it is an invasive species) began in 2013, and the stock of this region likely will reach levels similar to eastern Canada in the future.[6]

Since 2016, the snow crab is at the center of a dispute over fishing rights between Norway and the EU. The EU is of the view that the crab can be freely caught by EU fishers in the international waters in the Barents Sea. Norway, for its part, argues that the crab is not a fish but a sedentary species, and therefore subject to the jurisdiction Norway exercises over the continental shelf. The Norwegian Supreme Court adopted this view in a 2019 decision.[12]

In 2022, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) banned commercial fishing of snow crabs in the Bering Sea for the first time for the 2022/23 season.[13] The reason for this was the sharp decline in the population. It shrank from about eight billion in 2018 to one billion animals in 2021. The causes are overfishing as well as increased water temperatures as a result of climate change.[14] Cancellation of the crab fishery has significant implications for fishermen, industry, and communities.[15]

Taxonomy

The species was first described by Otto Fabricius in 1780, under the name Cancer phalangium,[16] a name that was invalid due to Johan Christian Fabricius having used it previously for the species now known as Inachus phalangium.[17] The first valid scientific name was provided by Otto Fabricius in 1788, when he redescribed the species as Cancer opilio. The type locality is Greenland.[17]

As the genus Cancer was divided up, the species C. opilio was transferred to a new genus, Chionoecetes by Henrik Nikolai Krøyer in 1838. C. opilio was the only species in the genus at first, so it is the type species.

Mary J. Rathbun described a subspecies, C. o. elongatus, in 1924. This is now generally recognised as a full species, Chionoecetes elongatus.[18]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b Peter Davie & Michael Türkay (2010). "Chionoecetes opilio (O. Fabricius, 1788)". World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved January 19, 2011.
  2. ^ a b Michel Comeau; Gérard Y Conan; Francesc Maynou; Guy Robichaud; Jean-Claude Therriault & Michel Starr (1998). "Growth, spatial distribution, and abundance of benthic stages of the snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio) in Bonne Bay, Newfoundland, Canada". Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 55 (1): 262–279. doi:10.1139/f97-255.
  3. ^ a b c R. W. Elner (1985). Crabs of the Atlantic Coast of Canada. DFO Underwater World Factsheet UW/43. Department of Fisheries and Oceans.
  4. ^ a b c T. Sakai (1938). "Snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio)". Crabs of Japan. Vol. 3. p. 275.
  5. ^ M. J. Tremblay (1997). "Snow Crab (Chionoecetes opilio) distribution limits and abundance trends on the Scotian Shelf" (PDF). Journal of Northwest Atlantic Fishery Science. 21: 7–22. doi:10.2960/J.v21.a1. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-08-19. Retrieved 2011-05-05.
  6. ^ a b c J. H. Sundet; S. Bakanev (2014). "Snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio) – a new invasive crab species becoming an important player in the Barents Sea ecosystem" (PDF). ICES 2014 Annual Science Conference.
  7. ^ a b c d Siegel, J. (2013). "Chionoecetes opilio". Animal Diversity Web. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  8. ^ Hubert J. Squires & Earl G. Dawe (2003). "Stomach contents of snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio, Decapoda, Brachyura) from the Northeast Newfoundland Shelf" (PDF). Journal of Northwest Atlantic Fishery Science. 32: 27–38. doi:10.2960/J.v32.a2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-08-19. Retrieved 2011-05-05.
  9. ^ D. H. Steele; R. G. Hooper & D. Keats (1986). "Two corophioid amphipods commensal on spider crabs in Newfoundland" (PDF). Journal of Crustacean Biology. 6 (1): 119–124. doi:10.1163/193724086x00776. JSTOR 1547935.
  10. ^ Robert W. Elner & Peter G. Beninger (1995). "Multiple reproductive strategies in snow crab, Chionoecetes opilio". Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology. 193 (1–2, Behavioural Ecology of Decapod Crustaceans: An Experimental Approach): 93–112. doi:10.1016/0022-0981(95)00112-3.
  11. ^ Gustavo A. Lovrich & Bernard Sainte-Marie (1997). "Cannibalism in the snow crab, Chionoecetes opilio (O. Fabricius) (Brachyura: Majidae), and its potential importance to recruitment". Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology. 211 (2): 225–245. doi:10.1016/S0022-0981(96)02715-3.
  12. ^ Henriksen, Tore (28 February 2019). "The Senator Case – A new turn in Norway's dealings with foreign vessels operating in the waters off Svalbard | The JCLOS Blog". The JCLOS Blog. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  13. ^ "Bering Sea Snow Crab Season Closed" (PDF).
  14. ^ Ramirez, Rachel (2022-10-16). "Billions of snow crabs have disappeared from the waters around Alaska. Scientists say overfishing is not the cause". CNN. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  15. ^ "Billions gone: what's behind the disappearance of Alaska snow crabs?". the Guardian. 2022-10-20. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  16. ^ Otto Fabricius (1780). "214. Cancer phalangium". Fauna Groenlandica (in Latin). pp. 234–235.
  17. ^ a b "Snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio)". Crabs of Japan. Retrieved January 19, 2011.
  18. ^ Peter K. L. Ng; Danièle Guinot & Peter J. F. Davie (2008). "Systema Brachyurorum: Part I. An annotated checklist of extant Brachyuran crabs of the world" (PDF). Raffles Bulletin of Zoology. 17: 1–286. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-06-06.
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Chionoecetes opilio: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Chionoecetes opilio, a species of snow crab, also known as opilio crab or opies, is a predominantly epifaunal crustacean native to shelf depths in the northwest Atlantic Ocean and north Pacific Ocean. It is a well-known commercial species of Chionoecetes, often caught with traps or by trawling. Seven species are in the genus Chionoecetes, all of which bear the name "snow crab". C. opilio is related to C. bairdi, commonly known as the tanner crab, and other crab species found in the cold, northern oceans.

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Distribution

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Arctic to Gulf of Maine

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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Kennedy, Mary [email]

Habitat

provided by World Register of Marine Species
bathyal, infralittoral and circalittoral of the Gulf and estuary

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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WoRMS Editorial Board
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Kennedy, Mary [email]