Dictionary Definition
crustacean adj : of or belonging to the class
Crustacea [syn: crustaceous] n : any mainly
aquatic arthropod usually having a segmented body and chitinous
exoskeleton
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
/krʌsˈteɪʃən/, /krVsteIS@n/Noun
Translations
Extensive Definition
The crustaceans (Crustacea) are a large group of
arthropods, comprising
almost 52,000 described species , and are
usually treated as a subphylum . They
include various familiar animals, such as crabs, lobsters, crayfish, shrimp and barnacles. The majority of them
are aquatic, living in either marine or
fresh
water environments, but a few groups have adapted to life on land, such
as terrestrial crabs,
terrestrial
hermit crabs and woodlice. Crustaceans are
among the most successful animals, and are as abundant in the
oceans as much as insects are on land. Over half of animals in the
world are marine copepod
crustaceans. The majority of crustaceans are also motile, moving about
independently, although a few taxonomic units are parasitic and live attached to
their hosts (including sea lice,
fish
lice, whale lice,
tongue
worms, and Cymothoa
exigua, all of which may be referred to as "crustacean lice"),
and adult barnacles live a sessile life — they are attached
headfirst to the substrate and cannot move independently. Although
most crustaceans are small, their morphology varies greatly and
they include such large animals as lobsters 70 cm long and
spider crabs with a leg span of nearly 4 m.
The scientific study of crustaceans is known as
carcinology. Other names for carcinology are malacostracology,
crustaceology and crustalogy, and a scientist who works in
carcinology is a carcinologist,
crustaceologist or crustalogist.
Structure of crustaceans
Crustaceans have three distinct body parts: head, thorax, and abdomen (or pleon), although the head and thorax may fuse to form a cephalothorax, an excellent example of tagmatization. The head bears two pairs of antennae, three pairs of mouthparts, and usually eyes (two compound eyes, an unpaired eye, or both). The thorax and pleon bear a number of lateral appendages, including the gills, and the tail ends with a telson. Crustacean appendages are used for swimming, crawling, and feeding. They may be highly modified as jaws and other structures, or may be lost. Smaller crustaceans respire through their body surface by diffusion , and larger crustaceans respire with gills or, as shown by Birgus latro, with abdominal lungs . Both systems (diffusion and gills) were being used by various crustaceans as early as the Middle Cambrian .As arthropods, crustaceans have a
stiff exoskeleton,
which must be shed to allow the animal to grow (ecdysis or molting). Various
parts of the exoskeleton may be fused together; this is
particularly noticeable in the carapace, the thick dorsal
shield seen on many crustaceans that often forms a protective
chamber for the gills. Crustacean appendages are typically
biramous, meaning they
are divided into two parts; this includes the second pair of
antennae, but not the first, which is uniramous. There is some doubt
whether this is a derived state, as had been traditionally assumed,
or whether it may be a primitive state, with the branching of the
limbs being lost in all extant arthropod groups except the
crustaceans. One piece of evidence supporting the latter view is
the biramous nature of trilobite
limbs .
The main body cavity is an expanded circulatory
system, through which blood is pumped by a heart located near the
dorsum. The alimentary canal consists of a straight tube that often
has a gizzard-like gastric mill for grinding food and a pair of
digestive glands that absorb food. Structures that function as
kidneys are located near the antennae. A brain exists in the form
of ganglia close to the antennae, and a collection of major ganglia
is found below the gut., Crustacea and Hexapoda (insects and allies) are sister
groups. Studies using DNA
sequences tend to show a paraphyletic Crustacea,
with the insects (but not
necessarily other hexapods) nested within that clade.
Fossil record
Those crustaceans that have soft exoskeletons reinforced with calcium carbonate, such as crabs and lobsters, tend to preserve well as fossils, but many crustaceans have only thin exoskeletons. Most of the fossils known are from coral reef or shallow sea floor environments, but many crustaceans live in open seas, on deep sea floors or in burrows. Crustaceans tend, therefore, to be more rare in the fossil record than trilobites. Some crustaceans are reasonably common in Cretaceous and Caenozoic rocks, but barnacles have a particularly poor fossil record, with very few specimens from before the Mesozoic era.The Late
Jurassic lithographic
limestones of Solnhofen,
Bavaria,
which are famous as the home of Archaeopteryx,
are relatively rich in decapod
crustaceans, such as Eryon (an eryonoid), Aeger
(a prawn) or Pseudastacus
(a lobster). The
"lobster bed" of the Greensand
formation from the Cretaceous
period, which occurs at Atherfield
on the Isle of
Wight, contains many well preserved examples of the small
glypheoid
lobster Mecochirus magna. Crabs have been found at a number of
sites, such as the Cretaceous Gault clay and
the Eocene
London
clay.
Consumption
Many crustaceans are consumed by humans, and nearly 10,000,000 tons were produced in 2005 . The vast majority of this output is of decapod crustaceans: crabs, lobsters, shrimp and prawns. Over 70% by weight of all crustaceans caught for consumption are shrimp and prawns, and over 80% is produced in Asia, with China alone producing nearly half the world's total. Non-decapod crustaceans are not widely consumed, with only 130,000 tons of krill being caught, despite krill having one of the greatest biomasses on the planet.References
General references
- Crustacea
crustacean in Arabic: قشريات
crustacean in Min Nan: Kah-khak-lūi
crustacean in Bulgarian: Ракообразни
crustacean in Catalan: Crustaci
crustacean in Czech: Korýši
crustacean in Welsh: Cramennog
crustacean in Danish: Krebsdyr
crustacean in German: Krebstiere
crustacean in Estonian: Vähilaadsed
crustacean in Spanish: Crustacea
crustacean in Esperanto: Krustacoj
crustacean in Persian: سختپوستان
crustacean in French: Crustacés
crustacean in Galician: Crustáceo
crustacean in Korean: 갑각류
crustacean in Ido: Krustaceo
crustacean in Indonesian: Crustacea
crustacean in Icelandic: Krabbadýr
crustacean in Italian: Crustacea
crustacean in Hebrew: סרטנאים
crustacean in Luxembourgish: Crustacéen
crustacean in Lithuanian: Vėžiagyviai
crustacean in Hungarian: Rákok
crustacean in Macedonian: Ракови
crustacean in Dutch: Kreeftachtigen
crustacean in Japanese: 甲殻類
crustacean in Norwegian: Krepsdyr
crustacean in Polish: Skorupiaki
crustacean in Portuguese: Crustáceo
crustacean in Romanian: Crustacee
crustacean in Quechua: Qaraqruyuwa
crustacean in Russian: Ракообразные
crustacean in Simple English: Crustacean
crustacean in Slovak: Kôrovce
crustacean in Slovenian: Raki
crustacean in Serbian: Ракови
crustacean in Finnish: Äyriäiset
crustacean in Swedish: Kräftdjur
crustacean in Thai: กุ้ง
crustacean in Vietnamese: Động vật giáp
xác
crustacean in Turkish: Kabuklular
crustacean in Ukrainian: Ракоподібні
crustacean in Chinese: 甲壳亚门