Yellowline arrow crab

Stenorhynchus seticornis

''Stenorhynchus seticornis'', the yellowline arrow crab or simply arrow crab, is a species of marine crab.
Yellowline Arrow Crab Sep 13, 2017. Oil Slick Leap, Bonaire. Pic made by mys husband, Mark Bockstael.
These odd-shaped crabs were quite common in all dive sites of the island. They are usually hidden under coral crevices. This one chose a very pretty surrounding with the vase sponge. Caribbean Netherlands,Geotagged,Stenorhynchus seticornis,Summer

Appearance

The body of ''S. seticornis'' is triangular, and the rostrum is drawn out into a long point with serrate edges. The legs are also long and thin, up to 10 cm across, and the animal's carapace may be up to 6 cm long. Colouration is variable in this species; the body may be golden, yellow or cream, marked with brown, black or iridescent-blue lines; the legs are reddish or yellow, and the claws are blue or violet.
Yellowline Arrow Crab Sep 15, 2017. Tori's Reef, Bonaire.
Another arrow crab beauty, this time hidden under an anemone. Caribbean Netherlands,Geotagged,Stenorhynchus seticornis,Summer

Distribution

''Stenorhynchus seticornis'' is found in the western and eastern Atlantic Ocean, from North Carolina and Bermuda to Brazil, including throughout the Caribbean Sea, also in the coastal waters of Cape Verde. It lives on coral reefs at depths of 10–30 feet .

Behavior

''S. seticornis'' is nocturnal and territorial. It eats small feather duster worms and other coral reef invertebrates. This crab is commonly kept in reef aquariums to control bristle worm populations.

''S. seticornis'' is one of a number of different invertebrates that are found living in association with the sea anemone, ''Lebrunia danae''. It is often found among the anemone's pseudotentacles along with Pederson's cleaning shrimp and the spotted cleaner shrimp .During mating, the male places a spermatophore on the female, which she uses to fertilise her eggs. These fertilised eggs are then carried on the female's pleopods until they are ready to hatch into zoea larvae. These swim towards the ocean surface and feed on plankton. They grow through a series of moults, and eventually metamorphose into the adult form.

Habitat

''S. seticornis'' is nocturnal and territorial. It eats small feather duster worms and other coral reef invertebrates. This crab is commonly kept in reef aquariums to control bristle worm populations.

''S. seticornis'' is one of a number of different invertebrates that are found living in association with the sea anemone, ''Lebrunia danae''. It is often found among the anemone's pseudotentacles along with Pederson's cleaning shrimp and the spotted cleaner shrimp .

Evolution

''Stenorhynchus seticornis'' was first described by Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Herbst in 1788, under the name ''Cancer seticornis''. It was also described as "''Cancer sagittarius''" by Johan Christian Fabricius in 1793, a name which is now a junior synonym of ''S. seticornis''. Pierre André Latreille erected the genus ''Stenorhynchus'' in 1818, and ''S. seticornis'' was confirmed as the type species by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature in 1966.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassMalacostraca
OrderDecapoda
FamilyInachidae
GenusStenorhynchus
SpeciesS. seticornis