- Source: Majoidea
The Majoidea are a superfamily of crabs which includes the various spider crabs.
Taxonomy
In "A classification of living and fossil genera of decapod crustaceans" De Grave and colleagues divided Majoidea into six families:
Family Epialtidae
Subfamily Epialtinae
Subfamily Pisinae
Subfamily Pliosomatinae
Subfamily Tychiinae
Family Hymenosomatidae
Family Inachidae
Family Inachoididae
Family Majidae
Subfamily Eurynolambrinae
Subfamily Majinae
Subfamily Micromaiinae
Subfamily Mithracinae
Subfamily Planoterginae
Family Oregoniidae
The classification has since been revised, with subfamilies Epialtinae and Mithracinae being elevated to families and Hymenosomatidae being moved to its own superfamily. The family composition according to the World Register of Marine Species is as follows:
family Epialtidae MacLeay, 1838
family Inachidae MacLeay, 1838
family Inachoididae Dana, 1851
family Macrocheiridae Dana, 1851
family Majidae Samouelle, 1819 – "true" spider crabs
family Mithracidae Balss, 1929
family Oregoniidae Garth, 1958
family †Priscinachidae Breton, 2009
Notable species within the superfamily include:
Japanese spider crab (Macrocheira kaempferi), the largest living species of crab, found on the bottom of the Pacific Ocean.
Libinia emarginata, the portly spider crab, a species of crab found in estuarine habitats on the east coast of North America.
Hyas, a genus of spider crabs, including the great spider crab (Hyas araneus), found in the Atlantic and the North Sea.
Maja squinado, sometimes called the "European long leg crab or pie faced crab" because of the way its face is shaped.
Australian majid spider crab, found off Tasmania, are known to pile up on each other, the faster-moving crabs clambering over the smaller, slower ones.
There is one fossil family, Priscinachidae, represented by a single species, Priscinachus elongatus, from the Cenomanian of France.
See also
Lithodidae
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kepiting
- Dekapoda
- Kepiting laba-laba Jepang
- Majoidea
- Crab
- Macrocheira
- Decorator crab
- Decapod
- Japanese spider crab
- Heterotremata
- King crab
- Chionoecetes bairdi
- Chionoecetes