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Gothus teemo is a species of crab and the type species of the genus Gothus. It was discovered in 2024 by Zi-Ming Yuan, Wei Jiang, and Zhong-Li Sha, based on specimens in the South China Sea . It is named after the board game Go as well as the League of Legends playable character Teemo .
The group's English name is derived from the QWERTY keyboard, with Q, W, E, and R being the primary keys used in online games such as League of Legends. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The fandom's name 바위게 (Scuttle Crab) is also a reference to the multiplayer video game.
YBA or yba can refer to a number of things: Young British Artists, a movement of British artists in the 1980s and 1990s; Yala language, a language spoken in Ogoja, Nigeria, by ISO 639 code; Young Buddhist Association, an association of Buddhists in the U.S. Banff Airport, an airstrip near Banff, Alberta, Canada, by IATA code
Charybdis natator is an unimportant species for fisheries in eastern Africa [6] and in India it is the fourth most important swimming crab caught in the crab fishery [2] whereas in Taiwan and Australia it is much more important. [6] Because of the high rate of meat recovery C. natator may be suitable for aquaculture. [6]
An additional adaptation found in the species Kiwa (tyleri) is the formation of a spine on the propodus (the end of the crab leg). This is beneficial for yeti crabs because they help the crustacean to cling to steep chimneys of hydrothermal vents. The stout, compact build of the crab also helps it traverse hydrothermal vent environments. [23]
In the waters in and around New Zealand, 77 living species of crabs (and 10 species of crab-like Anomura) have been recorded, along with a further 24 species of fossil crabs (marked with an obelisk). [1] Of the extant crabs, 37 are endemic to New Zealand (marked in boldface).
The phylogeny of king crabs as hermit crabs who underwent secondary calcification and left their shell has been suspected since the late 1800s. [4] They are believed to have originated during the Early Miocene in shallow North Pacific waters, where most king crab genera – including all Hapalogastrinae – are distributed and where they exhibit a high amount of morphological diversity.
Mictyris longicarpus, the light-blue soldier crab, is a species of crab that lives on sandy beaches from the Bay of Bengal to Australia; with other members of the genus Mictyris, it is "one of the most loved crabs in Australia". [2] Adults are 25 mm (1 in) across, white, with blue on their backs, and hold their claws vertically.