- Source: Trypaea
Trypaea australiensis, known as the (marine) yabby or ghost nipper in Australia, or as the one-arm bandit due to their occasional abnormally large arm, and as the Australian ghost shrimp elsewhere, is a common species of mud shrimp in south-eastern Australia, and may be the only extant species in the genus Trypaea. T. australiensis is a popular bait used live or frozen by Australians targeting a range of species. It grows to a length of 6 centimetres (2.4 in) and lives in burrows in mudflats or sandbanks, especially in or near estuaries.
Species
One extant and two extinct species belong to the genus Trypaea:
Trypaea australiensis Dana, 1852 (Australian ghost shrimp) (Indo-West Pacific and Australia)
† Trypaea inornata (Nagao & Huzioka, 1938)
† Trypaea mizunamiensis Karasawa, 1993 (temperate Asia)
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Trypaea
- Yabby
- Trypaea australiensis
- Thalassinidea
- Filhollianassa filholi
- Callianassa subterranea
- List of prehistoric malacostracans
- Callianassa
- Callianassidae
- William Stephenson (biologist)