The biggest king crab ever
known
(MM / 09-12-09) Sally Hall, a PhD student at the University
of Southampton's School of Ocean and Earth Science (SOES)
at the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton (NOCS)
has formally described four new species of king crab, all
from the deep sea.
Hall discovered the new species in the Smithsonian Collections
of the National Museum of Natural History in Washington.
Explaining the significance of the find, she said: "King
crabs include some of the largest crustaceans currently
inhabiting Earth and are fished by humans, particularly
from the shallower waters of the polar regions. The new
discoveries increase the total number of king crab species
known to 113."
The new species
are Paralomis nivosa from the
Philippines, P. makarovi from the Bering Sea, P.
alcockiana from South Carolina,
and Lithodes galapagensis from the Galapagos archipelago
– the first and only king crab species yet recorded from
the seas around the Galapagos Islands.
P. nivosa and P. makarovi came from
previously unidentified samples collected in the early
part of the twentieth century by the US Bureau of Fisheries
steamer, Albatross.
King crabs were first formally described in 1819. They
are now known from subtidal waters at high latitudes, but
deep-sea species occur in most of the world's oceans, typically
living at depths between 500 and 1500 metres. "We
are only now beginning to understand the incredible diversity
of animals living in the deep sea," said Hall: "It
is incredible that the Albatross collection is still yielding
new information, even though it is over 100 years since
this survey of deep-sea life began."
It is now clear that species of deep-sea king crab live in
most areas of the world's oceans, but many more species remain
to be discovered. The oceans off eastern Africa, the Indian
Ocean and the Southern Ocean are all particularly poorly
sampled. We need to know which king crab species live where
before we can fully understand their ecology and evolutionary
success.