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  2. Spiny lobster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiny_lobster

    It was recently discovered that spiny lobsters can also navigate by detecting the Earth's magnetic field. [18] They keep together by contact, using their long antennae. [19] Potential predators may be deterred from eating spiny lobsters by a loud screech made by the antennae of the spiny lobsters rubbing against a smooth part of the exoskeleton ...

  3. Jasus paulensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jasus_paulensis

    A previously recognised species Jasus tristani, found around Tristan da Cunha in the southern Atlantic Ocean, has now been synonymised with J. paulensis. [2] This is an uncommon species throughout its range and is usually found at depths between 10 and 35 m (33 and 115 ft) but occasionally down to about 60 metres (200 ft).

  4. Jasus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jasus

    Jasus is a genus of spiny lobsters which live in the oceans of the Southern Hemisphere. [2] They have two distinct "horns" projecting from the front of the carapace, but lack the stridulating organs present in almost all other genera of spiny lobsters. [2] Like all spiny lobsters, they lack claws, and have long stout antennae which are quite ...

  5. Panoploscelis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panoploscelis

    The file—consisting of a transverse vein with a single row of teeth—is located on the right wing, while the scraper consists of the sharply upturned right edge of the left wing. The thin glassy membrane of both wings, especially the larger left wing, functions as a diaphragm or drumhead to amplify the sound that is produced when the file is ...

  6. Palinurus elephas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palinurus_elephas

    Palinurus elephas is a common species of spiny lobster, found in the eastern Atlantic Ocean, from southern Norway to Morocco and the Azores, [7] and in the Mediterranean Sea, except its eastern extremes. [3] It lives on rocky exposed coasts below the intertidal zone, [2] mainly at depths of 20 to 70 metres (66 to 230 ft).

  7. Most people recognize an American lobster on sight but do not know that the spiny lobster found in the southern Atlantic waters and the Pacific are not lobsters. They are saltwater crayfish!

  8. An extra day to harvest spiny lobsters is coming to Florida ...

    www.aol.com/extra-day-harvest-spiny-lobsters...

    When is lobster season in Florida? Spiny lobster sport season is on July 24-25, 2024, the last consecutive Wednesday and Thursday each July. DeSantis added Sunday, July 14, exclusively for Florida ...

  9. Crustacean larva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crustacean_larva

    William Elford Leach erected the genus Megalopa in 1813 for a post-larval crab; a copepod post-larva is called a copepodite; a barnacle post-larva is called a cypris; a shrimp post-larva is called a parva; a hermit crab post-larva is called a glaucothoe; a spiny lobster / furry lobsters post-larva is called a puerulus and a slipper lobster post ...