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Ovalipes catharus

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Species of crab

Ovalipes catharus
Dorsal view of an Ovalipes catharus specimen with the anterior facing the top of the frame. The eyes, antennae, chelipeds, walking legs, paddles, and dorsal carapace are all visible. The specimen's carapace is lightly broken, with a fracture running down its right side.
Ventral view of Ovalipes catharus in a shallow puddle on top of dark sand. The crab is ostensibly dead and covered in sand particles. The abdomen and all 10 legs are visible; the abdomen and underside of the chelipeds and walking legs are a bright white.
Scientific classificationEdit this classification
Domain:Eukaryota
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Malacostraca
Order:Decapoda
Suborder:Pleocyemata
Infraorder:Brachyura
Family:Ovalipidae
Genus:Ovalipes
Species:
O. catharus
Binomial name
Ovalipes catharus
(Whitein White and Doubleday, 1843)
Map showing the distribution of Ovalipes catharus, with regions it resides in coloured in brown, regions it is not known to reside in coloured in light grey, and ocean transparent. In Australia, these include South Australia and Victoria. In New Zealand, these include North Island, South Island, Stewart Island, and the Chatham Islands; the Chatham Islands have been zoomed in on to show detail. Land masses besides Australia and New Zealand such as half the island of New Guinea are shown to the north, but none of them are brown.
Regions whose coasts houseOvalipes catharus.[1][2][3]
Synonyms[4]
  • Portunus catharusWhitein White and Doubleday, 1843

Ovalipes catharus, commonly known as thepaddle crab,[a]swimming crab,[b] or, inMāori,pāpaka,[8] is aspecies ofcrab in thefamilyOvalipidae.[4][9] It is found in shallow, sandy-bottomed waters around the coasts ofNew Zealand, theChatham Islands, and uncommonly in southernAustralia.[1][2][3]O. catharus is an opportunistic, aggressive, and versatile feeder active mostly at night, preying predominantly onmolluscs andcrustaceans.[10][11][12] It is also highly prone tocannibalism, which accounts for over a quarter of its diet in some locations.[13] The crab's paddle-shaped rear legs and streamlinedcarapace allow it to capture prey by swimming rapidly and to escape predation by burrowing in the sand.[14] Itsmating season is in winter and spring; the male carries the female until shemoults, after which the two mate and the female likely moves into deeper waters toincubate and disperse her larvae.[15][16]

Commercial fisheries have harvested paddle crabs since the 1970s, with catches declining considerably from a peak in the late 1990s.[17] Its population is expected to be increasing,[11] althoughecologists have raised concerns thatCharybdis japonica, aninvasive crab with a similar size, diet, and habitat, could outcompete the paddle crab.[18]O. catharus is present inMāori culture as both an artistic motif and as a traditional source of food.[19]

Description

[edit]
See also:Decapod anatomy
Frontal view of Ovalipes catharus walking on the seabed or potentially resting on a dark-coloured rock. The chelipeds, mouthparts, eyestalks, antennae, walking legs, and some of the dorsal carapace are visible. Fine, white hairs line the area directly underneath the lateral teeth. Fine hairs in the orbits and above the mouth are a sandy brown colour. The bottoms of the eyes are covered in sand.
The front ofO. catharus directly under the dorsal carapace is lined withsetae.[20]

Ovalipes catharus has an oval-shaped, streamlined, and slightly grainycarapace with five large, sawtooth-like projections to either side of the eyes and four smaller ones at the front.[1][14][20] The carapace has two large, marooneyespots at the rear, two smaller eyespots near the front, andcervical grooves which form a butterfly-shaped mark near the centre.[1][21][22] It is overall sandy grey with orange-red highlights and dotted with small, brown spots.[1][23] The crab's underside is white, and its rear legs – which are flattened and function as swimming paddles – have a purplish tinge.[1][24] The area above its mouth near the base of theantennae is somewhat hairy, and a line ofsetae runs from the base of its deeporbits out to the area underneath the carapace teeth.[20] Like otherOvalipes,O. catharus has well-developed, relatively large eyes.[14][25] Unlike about half ofOvalipes species, however, it does not exhibitiridescence as a form ofsignalling.[26]

Ovalipes catharus' relatively short front legs – thechelipeds – feature spines and granules on the wrists and setae on the posterior border of the arms.[20] The left pincer (minor chela) is smaller than its right (major chela), and bothdactyli – the movable tip of its claws – are slender and tapered.[27] The minor chela grows in direct proportion to the carapace width in females, but it may exhibit negativeallometry (proportionally smaller growth) in males.[28][c] The minor chela, used for cutting, is lined with small, conical teeth on both fingers, while the major chela also features a large proximal tooth used for crushing.[30] It has three pairs of walking legs,[d] which are somewhat granular and relatively flat.[1][33] The flattened rear paddles are fringed with setae.[1]

Mature male paddle crabs can reach carapace widths up to 150 mm (5.9 in),[11] and the largest males weigh around 600–700 g (21–25 oz).[34] Sexually mature females typically have a carapace width of >70 mm (2.8 in) and are known to be as wide as about 115 mm (4.5 in).[35][36] The youngest juveniles tend to reside in shallow waters of about 0.1–0.5 m (0.33–1.6 ft), while deeper waters of 5–15 m (16–49 ft) often house the largest, most mature individuals.[37] Abdomen size in males and juvenile females grows in direct proportion to carapace width, but above a carapace width of 30–40 mm (1.2–1.6 in), the female's abdomen exhibits positive allometry.[28][38][e] On average, the carapace is about 1.35x as broad as it is long,[20] and relative carapace length diminishes compared to the width as the crab grows.[28]

Ovalipes catharus has a long period of larval development compared to otherdecapods – about two months with eightzoeal (larval) stages.[40][41] Duringoogenesis, anoocyte buds off from anoogonium and initially measures 5–25 μm in diameter; as it develops, it grows to about 0.32 mm (0.013 in).[42] Theegg is nearly spherical, ranging from yellow and approximately 0.3 mm (0.012 in) in diameter when newly laid to black and approximately 0.37 mm (0.015 in) about a month later immediately prior to hatching into a zoea.[41][43] The zoea is transparent or blackish, later develops redchromatophores, and then turns black when itmoults into amegalopa.[41] The zoea features a prominentdorsal spine and similarly prominentrostral spine as well as two smaller lateral spines.[41] In its megalopal form, the rostrum is relatively much smaller, and the carapace – about 4.65 mm (0.18 in) long – is entirely smooth.[41] After its megalopal form, the paddle crab has 13 distinct developmental stages, calledinstars, and reaches its maximum size at 3–4 years old.[44] It is suspected that this growth is limited only by its lifespan and that it could otherwise continue to moult indefinitely once per year.[45] Members of the isolated population ofO. catharus from the Chatham Islands tend to be larger and take longer to mature than those in mainland New Zealand.[40][46]O. catharus' full lifespan is 3–5 years.[47]

Physiology and internal anatomy

[edit]

Ovalipes catharus is either anosmoconformer or a weakosmoregulator.[48] It can reverse the direction of its ventilatory flow by adjusting the sizes of apertures located at the bases of its legs, presumed to be a means of keeping particulate matter from obstructing these apertures.[49] The apertures lead into thebranchial chamber and are covered in dense setae for filtration.[50] Unlike in most decapods, this period of reversed flow can be sustained, and it is commonly seen when the crab is buried or at rest.[51]

Itsheart is a single-chamberedventricle which ejectshemolymph to sevenarteries.[52] Five arteries, including the anterior aorta, leave the heart anteriorly and supply organs such as the cerebralganglion,eyes, antennae,hepatopancreas, and variousdigestive organs.[52] One, which leaves the heart ventrally, is called the sternal artery and accounts for nearly 70% of flow; this branches into vessels which supply its five pairs of legs, the largest of which are those supplying its rear paddles.[53] Finally, a relatively small posterior aorta runs down the middle of the crab's abdomen.[54]

Ovalipes catharus is astenotherm, highly sensitive to temperature.[55] An increase in water temperature of just a few degrees substantially accelerates its growth.[56] At summer temperatures of about 20 °C (68 °F),O. catharus'heart rate is approximately 50 bpm.[57] Above this temperature, its heartbeats begin to shorten.[55] Its heart rate is more than doubled to 125 bpm at 25 °C (77 °F),[58] and temperatures around 30 °C (86 °F) are fatal.[55]Phosphorylation ofADP duringrespiration also decreases at temperatures over 20 °C (68 °F), indicating reduced ability of themitochondria to produceATP.[59] At temperatures around 10 °C (50 °F) – near the lower end of what it experiences in the wild[60]O. catharus needs to be actively encouraged to eat, eats less overall, and takes over three times as long to digest its food as it does at 20 °C (68 °F).[61][62]

Ovalipes catharus hears underwater by using a small canal system located under its first antenna called astatocyst.[63] The statocyst contains an agglomerate of sand particles called the statolith and functions similarly to theotolith invertebrates.[64]O. catharus is able to hear sounds between at least 40–2000 Hz, but it is especially sensitive to the range between 100–200 Hz.[65] It uses a yet-unknown internal mechanism to create a broad-frequency, multi-pulse "rasp" sound which is hypothesised to communicate food availability to other members of the species.[66] Males additionally use a yet-unknown internal mechanism to produce asub-bass sound used in their mating behaviour.[67]

Taxonomy

[edit]
Rear view of Ovalipes catharus swimming with its rear, paddle-shaped legs raised and its walking legs spread out laterally. Set against a teal, watery background with no visible seabed.
O. catharus uses its paddle-shaped rear legs to swim.[24]

Ovalipes catharus is colloquially known as the paddle crab, the common swimming crab,[7] or, inMāori,pāpaka.[8] It was described in 1843 by zoologistAdam White from a specimen in theBritish Museum collected byAndrew Sinclair.[23] Although White placed it into the genusPortunus,[23] marine biologistsWilliam Stephenson and May Rees placed it in the genusOvalipes based on its colour patterns in 1968.[68] Having been misidentified asO. punctatus like three other species had prior to 1968,O. catharus is part of a distinct group ofOvalipes which also includesO. australiensis,O. elongatus,O. georgei,O. punctatus, andO. trimaculatus.[69][f]O. catharus additionally closely resembles (and is likely conspecific with) a fossilised cheliped fragment from New Zealand'sUpper Pleistocene.[71][72] Three aspects taken together reliably distinguishO. catharus from other members ofOvalipes: fine granules on the raised ridges of the top side of its chelae, moderately fine stripes on the underside of its chelae, and a notably broad carapace (~1.35x broader than long).[20] The followingcladogram based onmorphology shows the relationship betweenO. catharus and the other extant species ofOvalipes:[73][g]

Dorsal view of a preserved Ovalipes catharus specimen with the anterior facing the bottom of the frame. A note at the top reads "Norman Douglas collection. Beneath that, another reads: "Ovalipes bipustulatus. Swimming crab. Maketu, Bay of Plenty, 5 April, 1977. Ashore, dead, in a wash up of seaweed on the western shore of the peninsula. N. Douglas." A note to the right of these two, another reads: "AK 78855. Auckland Museum, N.Z. Porcellanidae. Ovalipes catharus. L3523: N.Z., Bay of Plenty, Maketu, on the western shore of the peninsula Washed up, dead in seaweed. c. 37 44.8 S, 176 27.8 E. Coll: Douglas, N., 05 APR 1977. CMROVA.CAT." To the crab's left is an OpCard 201 colour correction chart. A ruler in centimetres is at the bottom of the frame, revealing a carapace width of approximately 100 millimetres. The crab's carapace and chelipeds are a light-yellowish colour with maroon spots. The walking legs and paddles are a dark, sandy brown.
A preservedO. catharus specimen
Ovalipes
     
     

Ovalipes georgei

     
     
     
     
     

Ovalipes elongatus

     

Ovalipes trimaculatus

     

Ovalipes catharus

     
     
     
     
     

Ovalipes floridanus

     


Distribution and habitat

[edit]

Ovalipes catharus is native to New Zealand, where it can be found fromStewart Island toNorthland and in theChatham Islands.[3][24] It is also present – but uncommon – on the southern coast of Australia, where it is known as far west as the state ofSouth Australia and as far east asPort Phillip Bay inVictoria.[1][2][41] It lives along sandy-bottomed coastal waters, generally at depths of <10 m (33 ft) inestuaries and thesubtidal zone,[74][36][75] and it moves into theintertidal zone during the evening or the night in order to feed.[11] It typically buries itself within the sediment during the day.[14] Although it generally sticks to shallow waters, it can be found at depths of up to 100 m (330 ft),[74] and the larvae can be found up to at least 700 m (2,300 ft) deep.[46] Juveniles are typically found in sheltered waters after migrating inshore during their megalopal form.[40] Males and females aggregate in sheltered bays during the winter and spring breeding season.[76] Afterward, males move into large, open beaches in spring, while females migrate to yet-unknown areas – speculated to be deeper spawning grounds for egg incubation.[77] Anecdotal information suggests a substantial population increase since the 1970s.[11]

Diet and foraging behaviour

[edit]
The off-white shell of a lone specimen of Paphies australis sitting on a background of grey pebbles
Bivalves such asPaphies australis are a significant portion of the paddle crab's diet.[78]

The diet ofOvalipes catharus consists predominantly ofmolluscs (especially of genusPaphies),crustaceans,fishes,bristle worms, andalgae.[79][11][80] Large paddle crabs tend to feed less frequently – generally on algae as well as on larger animals such asdecapods andteleosts – while smaller ones prey frequently on smaller, softer crustaceans such asamphipods,isopods,mysids, andcumaceans.[81] It frequently cannibalises smallerconspecifics and those that have recently moulted.[82][83] OtherO. catharus generally comprise at least several percent of the paddle crab's diet, and in some locations such asPlimmerton andParemata, this is over 25%.[84] It tends to eat more during the summer than during the winter.[61][62] No known difference in diet exists between males and females.[10]

The flattened hind legs and streamlined body shape of the crab allow it to swim at speeds up to 1 m/s (2.2 mph) and catch fast prey.[24][14][85] It additionally has slender, taperedchelae which are well-suited to handling small molluscs,[30] and correspondingly, molluscs eaten are generally less than 4 mm (0.16 in) in length.[86] Its chelae are dimorphic, exhibiting two different forms: the left is used for cutting while the right is used for crushing.[27] The paddles also allow the crab to stabilise itself and balance on its third pair of walking legs when digging bivalve prey out of the sand.[87]

Predators and other interactions

[edit]
A video of Ovalipes catharus retreating backward into loose, pebbly sand on the seabed, fully covering itself from back to front over a period of 6.5 seconds. The video is shot from the front at an angle of about 45 degrees to the right relative to where the crab is facing. Brownish seaweed is visible in the foreground of the shot.
O. catharus burrow in the seabed to escape predation.[14]

Predators of the paddle crab includespiny dogfish (Squalus acanthias),[88]snapper (Pagrus auratus),[14]rig (Mustelus lenticulatus),[89]groper (Polyprion oxygeneios),[14]Hector's dolphin,[90]Buller's albatross,[91] and theinvasive crab speciesCharybdis japonica.[92] Younger individuals are prone to being cannibalised, and all paddle crabs are vulnerable to cannibalism during moulting.[82] Commercial fisheries additionally target the paddle crab.[93] In order to escape predation,Ovalipes catharus creates temporary burrows in soft sand using its paddles, taking only several seconds on average to completely submerge itself by loosening the sand and retreating backward into the substrate.[94] It rests horizontally under about 10–20 mm (0.4–0.8 in) of sand, sometimes leaving itseyestalks poking out.[32]

Ecologists have raised concerns that the invasive Asian paddle crabCharybdis japonica, as it expands its range in New Zealand, could outcompeteO. catharus with its similar size and diet, someoverlap in habitat, high aggression, ability to bestO. catharus in one-on-one competition for food, and – due toglobal warming – its better thermal tolerance.[18][95][96]O. catharus appears to be largely unaffected by parasites commonly present inC. japonica;[75] for example, it does not appear to be typically parasitised byserpulids,nematodes, orbarnacles.[97] The overwhelming majority ofO. catharus[h] are instead hosts to thectenosome bryozoanTriticella capsularis, which forms a fur of up to almost 10 mm (0.4 in) thick on their underside after their final moult.[98][97] It is only found onO. catharus,[98] and it is speculated to be an obligatesymbiont of the crab.[99]

Mating and reproduction

[edit]
See also:Marine larval ecology
A perspective looking out from a sandy, brownish-grey beach (covered in to the dark pebbles to the left and smooth to the right) toward the somewhat-distant mouth of the bay, which is flanked on either side by peninsulas. The left is steep and lightly forested, while the right is shallow and bald except for grass. Very weak waves wash up onto the shore.
During winter and spring,O. catharus meet in sheltered bays such asLittle Akaloa for breeding.[76]

Ovalipes catharus undergoes apubertal moult at a carapace width of about 50–60 mm (2.0–2.4 in), reaching sexual maturity within the first year ofbenthic life.[38][100][e] Warmer temperatures extend the breeding season, accelerate growth, and lead to earlier sexual maturity, causing variation in mating times between populations.[101][102] Males and females begin to aggregate in shallow, sheltered bays during winter for mating,[101] and breeding occurs from May to November at the time the female moults.[103] In response to male competition near a receptive female, males become aggressive and communicate using sounds, although it is unknown if these are directed toward the female, the competing males, or both.[104] The male alternates between two sounds: a multi-pulse, low-mid frequency "zip" sound – created by rubbing the ridges on the underside of its chelae against aplectrum-like joint on its first walking legs; and a series ofsub-bass vibrations – accompanied by periodic swaying but produced by a yet-unknown internal mechanism.[105] The zip is accompanied by what may be acourtship display whereby the crab "walks forward and flicks both swimming paddles in a twisting motion."[67]

A male paddle crab can only mate with a soft-bodied female within a four-day window after her moult,[106][i] so he carries a pre-moult female under his body for up to 10 days prior to mating.[107][108] A male who is otherwise hungry will generally refrain from cannibalising a suitable female partner;[109] instead, he tends to protect the female during mating, which lasts between 12 and 36 hours and even up to four days.[110][111] After mating and separation, the male can continue to identify his partner to avoidsexual cannibalism while her body is still soft, but this sometimes still happens.[109] Protection given by males during this process when the female is vulnerable from moulting is hypothesised to explain why several locations havesex ratios skewed in favour of females.[112]

The female is released by the male after mating and moves on to spawning grounds in what are likely deeper waters.[101] It is not known how many egg batches can be fertilised from one insemination, but females have been observed to produce up to four or five without re-mating.[113][114] Number of eggs per batch is strongly correlated with carapace width and body mass, with larger and heavier crabs producing more.[110] In one batch, female crabs have been found to produce between as few as 80,000 and as many as 850,000 eggs, and a large female of about 100 mm (3.9 in) typically produces around 500,000.[115][36] Like in other crabs, however, a proportion of these are lost to disease, egg failure, and predation.[115] Larvae develop synchronously and are generally released at night.[116][106] They are released in large numbers through vigorous waving of the female's body, which disturbs their egg cases and causes them to break out.[106] When releasing, the female extends her legs to position herself as far above the seafloor as possible.[116] She then angles herself slightly upward and begins flexing her abdomen to release large clouds of larvae.[116] Females typically spawn all of their larvae at one time, but in some locations, they will release the larvae in multiple batches.[11][117] The spawning season generally occurs from September to March.[103][117] In total, a female paddle crab can produce up to an estimated 10 batches in a lifetime over the course of four breeding seasons.[118]

Relation to humans

[edit]

Ovalipes catharus is known for its aggression on beaches, often pinching swimmers in New Zealand,[19][1] and paddle crab shells are frequently found washed ashore by beachgoers.[7] It is a common motif inMāori art, with designs being incorporated into weaving patterns,tā moko (facial tattoos), and the designs ofwharenui (meeting houses) andwhare wānanga (houses of learning).[19] The crabs are a traditional food source, but researchers in the earlyColonial period did not record much about harvesting traditions.[19]

Commercial fisheries have targeted paddle crabs since the late 1970s, mostly to the east of theNorth Island and the north of theSouth Island.[119][120] The paddle crab is known for having meat with both good flavour and texture,[121][122] and catch is sold both locally in New Zealand and overseas to Japan.[123][j] Paddle crab landings generally increased until the late 1990s, reaching a peak at 519 t (572 short tons; 1,144,000 lb) in 1998–1999, at which point they began generally decreasing for the next two decades, reaching an average of 16.6 t (18.3 short tons; 37,000 lb) annually from the five-year period of 2017–2022.[125] Whereas the majority of catch in the 1990s and 2000s came from the east coast of North Island and the west coast of South Island, this declined steeply in the 2010s, and catch in the 2020s has so far come almost exclusively from the east coast of South Island.[120][126] The causes of this decline in catch are not well-understood.[46][127]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Sometimes "New Zealand paddle crab"[5][6]
  2. ^Sometimes "common swimming crab"[7]
  3. ^This is disputed as potentially a statistical quirk.[29]
  4. ^Some sources exclude the rear paddles as walking legs and refer to them independently,[31] while others treat them as the last pair of walking legs.[32]
  5. ^abThe pubertal moult was originally identified at a carapace width of about 40 mm (1.6 in) in males and about 30–40 mm (1.2–1.6 in) in females,[39] but this is likely erroneous, corresponding instead to a subadult phase with relatively increased growth ofsecondary sexual characteristics, not sexual maturity.[38]
  6. ^This group – one of two – is distinguished from the rest ofOvalipes by features such as short chelipeds, large teeth to either side of the front of its carapace, and a triangular last segment of the male abdomen.[70]
  7. ^Ovalipes itself sits within themonogeneric familyOvalipidae.[9]
  8. ^97.4% ofO. catharus surveyed from six sites were hosts toTriticella capsularis.[97]
  9. ^After four days, the female's carapace becomes too hardened to mate.[106]
  10. ^In the 1980s, research was conducted into exporting to the United States, which had previously failed due to spoilage and lack of market interest.[124][121]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijWilkens, Serena L.;Ahyong, Shane T. (2015).Coastal Crabs: A Guide to the Crabs of New Zealand(PDF) (First ed.).NIWA. p. 43.Archived(PDF) from the original on 18 September 2024. Retrieved7 October 2024.
  2. ^abcO'Hara, Tim; Barmby, Victoria (May 2000).Victorian Marine Species of Conservation Concern: Molluscs, Echinoderms and Decapod Crustaceans (Report). Victoria Department of Natural Resources and Environment. p. 45.ISBN 0-7311-4561-5 – viaResearchGate.
  3. ^abcMcLay 1988, p. 200.
  4. ^abDe Grave, Sammy (10 April 2022)."Ovalipes catharus (White in White & Doubleday, 1843)".WoRMS.World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved28 October 2024.
  5. ^Flood, Goeritz & Radford 2019, p. 1.
  6. ^Haddon 1994, p. 1.
  7. ^abcAhyong, Shane T. (29 April 2010)."Summer Series 2: Cannibals of the seashore".NIWA.Archived from the original on 2 December 2024. Retrieved29 November 2024.
  8. ^abMoorfield, John C."pāpaka".Te Aka Māori Dictionary.Archived from the original on 5 March 2022. Retrieved5 March 2022.
  9. ^abPoore, Gary C.B.;Ahyong, Shane T. (2023).Marine Decapod Crustacea: A Guide to Families and Genera of the World. CRC Press. pp. 695–696.doi:10.1071/9781486311798.ISBN 978-1-4863-1178-1.LCCN 2021388782.
  10. ^abWear & Haddon 1987, pp. 39, 41.
  11. ^abcdefgFisheries New Zealand 2023, p. 1038.
  12. ^Haddon 1995, p. 256.
  13. ^Wear & Haddon 1987, pp. 40, 44.
  14. ^abcdefghMcLay & Osborne 1985, p. 125.
  15. ^Haddon 1994, p. 331.
  16. ^Osborne 1987, pp. 58, 84–86.
  17. ^Fisheries New Zealand 2023, p. 1035.
  18. ^abFowler, Muirhead & Taylor 2013, p. 672.
  19. ^abcdVennell, Robert (5 October 2022).Secrets of the Sea: The Story of New Zealand's Native Sea Creatures. HarperCollins UK. pp. 78–83.ISBN 978-1-77554-179-0.LCCN 2021388548.Wikidata Q114871191.
  20. ^abcdefStephenson & Rees 1968, p. 225.
  21. ^Naylor, John R.; Webber, W. Richard; Booth, John D. (2005).A guide to common offshore crabs in New Zealand waters(PDF) (Report). New Zealand Aquatic Environment and Biodiversity Report.New Zealand Ministry of Fisheries. p. 24.ISSN 1176-9440.
  22. ^Stephenson & Rees 1968, pp. 226–227.
  23. ^abcWhite, Adam;Doubleday, Edward (1843). "List of Annulose Animals hitherto recorded as found in New Zealand, with the Descriptions of some New Species". InDieffenbach, Ernest (ed.).Travels in New Zealand; with Contributions to the Geography, Geology, Botany, and Natural History of that Country. Vol. II. John Murray. p. 265 – via theInternet Archive.
  24. ^abcdOsborne 1987, p. 3.
  25. ^Parker, Mckenzie & Ahyong 1998, p. 861.
  26. ^Parker, Mckenzie & Ahyong 1998, p. 862.
  27. ^abDavidson 1986, pp. 285, 295.
  28. ^abcDavidson & Marsden 1987, p. 308.
  29. ^Clayton 1990, p. 285.
  30. ^abDavidson 1986, p. 295.
  31. ^Davidson & Taylor 1995, p. 608.
  32. ^abMcLay & Osborne 1985, p. 126.
  33. ^Stephenson & Rees 1968, pp. 225–226.
  34. ^Davidson 1994, p. 4.
  35. ^Osborne 1987, pp. 55–56.
  36. ^abcMcLay 1988, p. 202.
  37. ^"Biology and Ecology ofOvalipes catharus" (worksheet).Bay of Plenty Polytechnic. p. 1. Archived fromthe original on 20 August 2011. Adapted from “Form 7 Biology Animal Study” by Paul Furneaux of Otumoetai College.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  38. ^abcOsborne 1987, p. 64.
  39. ^Davidson & Marsden 1987, p. 313.
  40. ^abcMcLay 1988, p. 203.
  41. ^abcdefWear, Robert G.; Fielder, Donald R. (1985).The marine fauna of New Zealand: Larvae of Brachyura (Crustacea, Decapoda). New Zealand Oceanographic Institute Memoir 92. pp. 50–52.ISBN 0-477-06722-0.ISSN 0083-7903 – via theInternet Archive.
  42. ^Armstrong 1988, pp. 531–532.
  43. ^Osborne 1987, p. 62.
  44. ^Osborne 1987, p. 28.
  45. ^Osborne 1987, pp. 16, 101.
  46. ^abcFisheries New Zealand 2023, p. 1039.
  47. ^Osborne 1987, p. 101.
  48. ^Richards 1992, p. 48.
  49. ^Davidson & Taylor 1995, pp. 607–608.
  50. ^Davidson & Taylor 1995, p. 607.
  51. ^Davidson & Taylor 1995, pp. 605–606.
  52. ^abDavidson & Taylor 1995, p. 611.
  53. ^Davidson & Taylor 1995, pp. 611–612, 621.
  54. ^Davidson & Taylor 1995, p. 612.
  55. ^abcIftikar, MacDonald & Hickey 2010, p. 236.
  56. ^Osborne 1987, pp. 91–93.
  57. ^Iftikar, MacDonald & Hickey 2010, pp. 233–234.
  58. ^Iftikar, MacDonald & Hickey 2010, p. 234.
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  60. ^Osborne 1987, p. 90.
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