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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.
This is a difficult process that takes many hours, and if a crab gets stuck, it will die. After freeing itself from the old shell (now called an exuvia), the crab is extremely soft and hides until its new shell has hardened. While the new shell is still soft, the crab can expand it to make room for future growth. [17]: 78–79
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]
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
The meat of Atergatis floridus, like that of many related crab species from the family Xanthidae is toxic.The toxins are synthesised by bacteria of the genus Vibrio which live in symbiosis with the crab and the poisons are one similar to those found in puffer fish, i.e. tetrodotoxin, and also saxitoxin which is the primary toxin involved in paralytic shellfish poisoning.
Kiwa puravida is a species of deep-sea dwelling decapod, a member of the genus Kiwa, a genus of animals sometimes informally known as "yeti crabs". [1]The crabs live at deep-sea cold seeps where they feed on symbiotic Pseudomonadota, which they cultivate on hair-like projections on their claws.
A L. beagle washed ashore off Western Australia's south coast and was found by a Danish family, who sent it to the Western Australia Museum for identification. Andrew Hosie, a crustacean and worm curator at the Western Australian Museum, and Colin McLay, a marine biologist affiliated with the University of Canterbury in New Zealand, then described the crab as a new species, one of the three ...