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  2. Penaeus monodon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penaeus_monodon

    Penaeus coeruleus Stebbing, 1905. Penaeus bubulus Kubo, 1949. Penaeus monodon, commonly known as the giant tiger prawn, [1][2] Asian tiger shrimp, [3][4] black tiger shrimp, [5][6] and other names, is a marine crustacean that is widely reared for food. Tiger prawns displayed in a supermarket.

  3. Penaeus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penaeus

    Penaeus hathor (Burkenroad, 1959) Penaeus monodon Fabricius, 1798. Penaeus semisulcatus De Haan, 1844. Penaeus is a genus of prawns, including the giant tiger prawn (P. monodon), the most important species of farmed crustacean worldwide.

  4. Prawn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prawn

    Prawn is a common name for small aquatic crustaceans with an exoskeleton and ten legs (members of the order of decapods), some of which are edible. [1] The term prawn[2] is used particularly in the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Commonwealth nations, for large swimming crustaceans or shrimp, especially those with commercial significance in the ...

  5. Marsupenaeus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsupenaeus

    Marsupenaeus is a monotypic genus of prawn. It contains a single species, Marsupenaeus japonicus, known as the kuruma shrimp, kuruma prawn, or Japanese tiger prawn. It occurs naturally in bays and seas of the Indo-West Pacific, but has also reached the Mediterranean Sea as a Lessepsian migrant. It is one of the largest species of prawns, and is ...

  6. Macrobrachium rosenbergii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrobrachium_rosenbergii

    Description. Grilled giant river prawns in Thai cuisine, each (whole) prawn weighing around 500 g. M. rosenbergii can grow to a length over 30 cm (12 in). [6] They are predominantly brownish in colour, but can vary. Smaller individuals may be greenish and display faint vertical stripes. The rostrum is very prominent and contains 11 to 14 dorsal ...

  7. Penaeus esculentus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penaeus_esculentus

    William Aitcheson Haswell arrived in Australia in 1878, and began working in a marine zoology laboratory at Watsons Bay.In 1879, he described Penaeus esculentus in a paper in the Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales, basing his description on material in the Macleay Museum which had come from Port Jackson and Port Darwin, and noting that P. esculentus is "the common edible ...

  8. Shrimp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrimp

    Worldwide, shrimp trawl fisheries generate about 2% of the world's catch of fish in weight, but result in more than one third of the global bycatch total. The most extensively fished species are the akiami paste shrimp, the northern prawn, the southern rough shrimp, and the giant tiger prawn. Together these four species account for nearly half ...

  9. Marine shrimp farming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_shrimp_farming

    Marine shrimp farming is an aquaculture business for the cultivation of marine shrimp or prawns [Note 1] for human consumption. Although traditional shrimp farming has been carried out in Asia for centuries, large-scale commercial shrimp farming began in the 1970s, and production grew steeply, particularly to match the market demands of the United States, Japan and Western Europe.