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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Leucon (Crymoleucon) Rossi, A New Species (Crustacea: Cumacea: Leuconidae) From The Shelf Waters Of The Ross Sea (Antarctica), With A Key To The Genus Leucon South Of 60°S, Peter Rehm, Richard W. Heard Dec 2008

Leucon (Crymoleucon) Rossi, A New Species (Crustacea: Cumacea: Leuconidae) From The Shelf Waters Of The Ross Sea (Antarctica), With A Key To The Genus Leucon South Of 60°S, Peter Rehm, Richard W. Heard

Faculty Publications

A new leuconid cumacean, Leucon (Crymoleucon) rossi n. sp., is described from depths of 84 to 458 m in the Ross Sea off the Victoria Land coast. Leucon rossi n. sp. is distinguished from other members of the genus by a combination of characters including 1) a blunt, horizontally directed pseudorostrum) Without a distinctly protruding siphon; 2) strongly developed antennal notch; 3) entire dorsomedian margin of carapace appearing serrate, armed with 14 to 19 anteriorly Curved spines in female (up to 21 in subadult males); 4) a small, but distinct, spine behind the frontal lobe; and 5) the uropodal peduncle …


Spiny Lobsters Detect Conspecific Blood-Borne Alarm Cues Exclusively Through Olfactory Sensilla, Shkelzen Shabani, Michiya Kamio, Charles D. Derby Aug 2008

Spiny Lobsters Detect Conspecific Blood-Borne Alarm Cues Exclusively Through Olfactory Sensilla, Shkelzen Shabani, Michiya Kamio, Charles D. Derby

Peer Reviewed Articles

When attacked by predators, diverse animals actively or passively release molecules that evoke alarm and related anti-predatory behavior by nearby conspecifics. The actively released molecules are alarm pheromones, whereas the passively released molecules are alarm cues. For example, many insects have alarm-signaling systems that involve active release of alarm pheromones from specialized glands and detection of these signals using specific sensors. Many crustaceans passively release alarm cues, but the nature of the cues,sensors and responses is poorly characterized. Here we show in laboratory and field experiments that injured Caribbean spiny lobsters, Panulirus argus, passively release alarm cues via blood …