Tubuca polita

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Tubuca polita
Tubuca polita, Male, Hervey Bay, Qld, Australia 2.jpg
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Crustacea
Class: Malacostraca
Order: Decapoda
Suborder: Pleocyemata
Infraorder: Brachyura
Family: Ocypodidae
Subfamily: Gelasiminae
Tribe: Gelasimini
Genus: Tubuca
Species:
T. polita
Binomial name
Tubuca polita
(Crane, 1975)
Tubuca polita Tubuca polita, Tin Can Bay, Qld, Australia 2.jpg
Tubuca polita

Tubuca polita, commonly known as the polished fiddler crab. [1] or pink-clawed fiddler crab [2] is a species of fiddler crab that is found in the northern part of Australia including the Torres Strait Islands [3]

Tubuca polita was formerly a member of the genus Uca , but in 2016 it was placed in the genus Tubuca , a former subgenus of Uca. [4]

The name polita comes from the unusually smooth ("polished") surface of the "manus" (the lower claw and wrist). [5]

Description

Like other fiddler crabs, Tubuca polita males have one claw that is significantly larger than the other, while females have two equal-sized smaller claws. It has a brown and blue-black carapace with cream or grey green marbling, [6] or in some areas yellow or occasionally orange or pink. [7] The male claw has a rose pink hand with white fingers. The width of the carapace is up to around 25 mm. [2]

This species is found adjacent to mangroves on the seaward side. They live in mud or sandy mud, in burrows, but on flats rather than steep banks. [5] They are often found together with Gelasimus vomeris and Tubuca seismella crabs. Unlike some other fiddler crabs, females also wave their claws in addition to males. These crabs mate on the surface rather than in burrows. [8]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ghost crab</span> Subfamily of crustaceans

Ghost crabs are semiterrestrial crabs of the subfamily Ocypodinae. They are common shore crabs in tropical and subtropical regions throughout the world, inhabiting deep burrows in the intertidal zone. They are generalist scavengers and predators of small animals. The name "ghost crab" derives from their nocturnality and their generally pale coloration. They are also sometimes called sand crabs, though the name refers to various other crabs that do not belong to the subfamily.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fiddler crab</span> Genus of crabs

The fiddler crab or calling crab may be any of more than one hundred species of semiterrestrial marine crabs in the family Ocypodidae, well known for their sexually dimorphic claws; the males' major claw is much larger than the minor claw, while the females' claws are both the same size. A smaller number of ghost crab and mangrove crab species are also found in the family Ocypodidae. This entire group is composed of small crabs, the largest being slightly over two inches (5 cm) across. Fiddler crabs are found along sea beaches and brackish intertidal mud flats, lagoons, swamps, and various other types of brackish or salt-water wetlands.

<i>Leptuca pugilator</i> Species of crab

Leptuca pugilator, the sand fiddler crab, Atlantic sand fiddler crab, or Calico fiddler, is a species of fiddler crab that is found from Massachusetts to the Gulf of Mexico. It lives in burrows in coastal and estuarine mud-flats, and can be extremely abundant. It can be differentiated from the morphologically similar Minuca pugnax and Minuca minax by the smoothness of the inside of its claws. One claw is larger than the other, and can be much larger than the crab's body, at up to 41 mm (1.6 in) long.

<i>Minuca pugnax</i> Species of crab

Minuca pugnax, commonly known as the Atlantic marsh fiddler crab, is a species of fiddler crab that lives on north-western shores of the Atlantic Ocean.

<i>Heloecius</i> Genus of crabs

Heloecius cordiformis is a species of semiterrestrial crab found in mangrove swamps and mudflats along the east coast of Australia. Adults are around 25 mm (1 in) wide, with males being larger and having larger and more conspicuously coloured claws. The males wave their claws to communicate with other crabs, giving them their common name of semaphore crab. They can breathe both in air and under water, and feed at low tide on detritus in the sediment. H. cordiformis is the only species in the genus Heloecius and the family Heloeciidae.

<i>Tubuca urvillei</i> Species of crab

Tubuca urvillei is a species of fiddler crab. It is found in the Southeastern Africa from southern Somalia to the South Africa and Madagascar.

<i>Tubuca flammula</i> Species of crab

Tubuca flammula, commonly known as the flame-backed fiddler crab is a species of fiddler crab that is found in the northwest of Western Australia, the northern part of the Northern Territory and the western half of Papua New Guinea

<i>Leptuca</i>

Leptuca is a genus of fiddler crabs belonging to the family Ocypodidae.

<i>Leptuca spinicarpa</i> Species of crab

Leptuca spinicarpa, commonly known as the spiny-wristed fiddler crab or the spined fiddler crab, is a species of fiddler crab native to coastal habitats along the Gulf of Mexico from northwestern Florida to Mexico.

<i>Leptuca panacea</i> Species of crab

Leptuca panacea, commonly known as the Gulf sand fiddler crab or the Panacea sand fiddler, is a species of fiddler crab native to coastal habitats along the Gulf of Mexico from northwestern Florida to Mexico.

Leptuca subcylindrica, commonly known as the Laguna Madre fiddler crab or the puffed fiddler crab, is a sparsely-studied species of fiddler crab native to southern Texas and northeastern Mexico in the Gulf of Mexico.

Leptuca cumulanta, commonly known as the heaping fiddler crab or the mangrove fiddler crab, is a species of fiddler crab native to tropical and subtropical areas of the western Atlantic.

Leptuca uruguayensis, commonly known as the Uruguayan fiddler crab or the southwestern Atlantic fiddler crab, is a species of fiddler crab native to temperate and subtropical areas of the southeastern coast of South America.

Leptuca batuenta, commonly known as the beating fiddler crab, is a species of fiddler crab native to the tropical eastern Pacific, from El Salvador to northern Peru.

Leptuca saltitanta, commonly known as the energetic fiddler crab, is a species of fiddler crab native to the eastern Pacific coasts, from El Salvador in Central America to Colombia in South America.

Leptuca musica, commonly known as the musical fiddler crab, is a species of fiddler crab native to Baja California and the Gulf of California in Mexico.

Leptuca terpsichores, commonly known as the dancing fiddler crab, is a species of fiddler crab native to the eastern Pacific coast of the Americas, from Nicaragua to Peru.

<i>Gelasimus vomeris</i> Species of crab

Gelasimus vomeris is a species of fiddler crab found in the southwest Pacific Ocean. In Australia, it is found in the east and north from Darwin to Sydney.

<i>Tubuca coarctata</i> Species of fiddler crab

Tubuca coarctata is a species of fiddler crab found in the western Pacific ocean, including Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines, Indonesia, New Guinea and Australia. The common name of these crabs is either the compressed fiddler crab, or the orange-clawed fiddler crab,. They are found on tidal mud flats adjacent mangroves and muddy tidal creek and river banks.

<i>Tubuca dussumieri</i> Species of crab

Tubuca dussumieri, is a species of fiddler crab that is found in the western and south pacific including New Caledonia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Taiwan, Japan, north eastern Australia

References

  1. Rosenberg, M. "Tubuca polita". fiddler crab. Retrieved 2022-12-10.
  2. 1 2 Davie, P. (2011). Wild Guide to Morton Bay and Adjacent Coasts Volume 2 (2 ed.). Queensland Museum.
  3. "WoRMS taxon details, Tubuca polita (Crane, 1975)". World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2022-12-10.
  4. Shih, Hsi-Te; Ng, Peter K. L.; Davie, Peter J. F.; Schubart, Christoph D.; et al. (2016). "Systematics of the family Ocypodidae Rafinesque, 1815 (Crustacea: Brachyura), based on phylogenetic relationships, with a reorganization of subfamily rankings and a review of the taxonomic status of Uca Leach, 1814, sensu lato and its subgenera". The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology. 64.
  5. 1 2 Crane, Jocelyn (1975). Fiddler crabs of the world: Ocypodinae Genus Uca. Princeton University Press.
  6. "A Revision of the Fiddler Crabs of Australia Ocypodinae (Uca)". Fiddler Crab Info. Western Australian Museum. 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-14.
  7. Booksmythe, Isobel; Detto, Tanya; Backwell, Patricia (2008). "A field guide to the fiddler crabs of East Point Reserve, Darwin, Northern Territory". Northern Territory Naturalist (20).
  8. How, Martin (2007). "The Fiddler Crab Claw-waving Display: An analysis of the structure and function of a movement-based visual signal" (PDF). Australian National University.