Coenobita

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The junior homonym Coenobita Gistl, 1848 is now the moth genus Ectropis.
Coenobita
Caribbean hermit crab.JPG
Caribbean hermit crab, C. clypeatus
Scientific classification
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Coenobita

Latreille, 1829
Type species
Pagurus clypeatus
Fabricius, 1787 [1]

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The genus Coenobita contains the sixteen species of terrestrial hermit crabs.[1]

Ecology

Coenobita species carry water in the gastropod shells they inhabit, allowing them to stay out of water for a long time.[2]

Distribution

The majority of the species are found in the Indo-Pacific region, with only one species in West Africa, one species occurring along the western Atlantic Ocean, and one species occurring on the Pacific coast of the Americas.[3]

Species Authority Year Distribution [3]
Coenobita brevimanus Dana 1852 Indo-Pacific
Coenobita carnescens Dana 1851 Pacific Ocean
Coenobita cavipes Stimpson 1858 Indo-Pacific
Coenobita clypeatus (Fabricius) 1787 Western Atlantic
Coenobita compressus H. Milne-Edwards 1836 Eastern Pacific
Coenobita longitarsis De Man 1902 East Indies
Coenobita olivieri Owen 1839 Pacific Ocean
Coenobita perlatus H. Milne-Edwards 1837 Indo-Pacific
Coenobita pseudorugosus Nakasone 1988 Indo-Pacific
Coenobita purpureus Stimpson 1858 Japan
Coenobita rubescens Greeff 1884 West Africa
Coenobita rugosus H. Milne-Edwards 1837 Indo-Pacific
Coenobita scaevola (Forskål) 1775 Indian Ocean, Red Sea
Coenobita spinosus H. Milne-Edwards 1837 Polynesia & Australia
Coenobita variabilis McCulloch 1909 Australia
Coenobita violascens Heller 1862 Pacific Ocean

Taxonomy

Coenobita is closely related to the coconut crab, Birgus latro, with the two genera making up the whole of the family Coenobitidae. The name Coenobita was coined by Pierre André Latreille in 1829, from an Ecclesiastical Latin word, ultimately from the Greek χοινόβιον, meaning "monk"; despite ending in a vowel, the genus is masculine in gender.[4]

References

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External links

  • Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons