Any help is appreciated.

crayfish ID question
#1
Guest_SeaweedGuy_*
Posted 17 June 2009 - 04:26 PM
Any help is appreciated.
#2
Guest_ashtonmj_*
Posted 17 June 2009 - 07:31 PM
#3
Guest_SeaweedGuy_*
Posted 22 June 2009 - 07:17 PM
#4
Guest_schambers_*
Posted 23 June 2009 - 11:11 AM
Also, here is an excerpt from this post: Invertebrate Identification Procedures
- Crayfish -
A dorsal (top) picture should show at least the carapace (head to rostrum). A ventral (bottom) picture should show a detailed picture of the gonopods (first swimmeret in males) or the annulus ventralus (receptacle in females). See this post regarding a HIGH quality image of gonopods. Other pictures such as full dorsal shots, mandibles, or claws are welcome and may be necessary.
#5
Guest_SeaweedGuy_*
Posted 19 July 2009 - 11:34 AM
Attached Files
#6
Guest_centrarchid_*
Posted 19 July 2009 - 07:52 PM
It is a form II / juvenile female. Species based on gross appearance in my opinion is the virile crayfish Orconectes virilis (a.k.a. northern crayfish). They have capacity for fast growth and are good eating.
Edited by centrarchid, 19 July 2009 - 07:53 PM.
#7
Guest_ashtonmj_*
Posted 19 July 2009 - 09:15 PM
#8
Guest_centrarchid_*
Posted 20 July 2009 - 08:52 AM
I'm not so sure it is virle crayfish and instead a rusty crayfish. The aerola is a little wide for a virilis, the mandimbles appear smooth, and the setae/tubercles on the the chela aren't very enlarged.
If not O. virilis, then I would first suspect O. propinquus before O. rusticus. Overall coloration outside of O. rusticus range for invasive populations of O. rusticus in WI but not unlike juvenile O. propinquus populations of Indiana and Illinois. The critter shown has the stripe going down the back which many O. propinquus exhibit. Aerola width can be broader in populations exposed to consistantly high oxygen concentrations. Image showing mandibles not of quality required to distinguish creniculate versus entire mandibles (need better image).
#9
Guest_SeaweedGuy_*
Posted 23 July 2009 - 12:56 PM
#10
Guest_centrarchid_*
Posted 23 July 2009 - 01:28 PM
I've seen lots of rusty crayfish in Wisconsin, and this doesn't fit the coloration pattern that I'm used to for them. I can try to provide some different angles if that would help with the ID.
I do not think it is a rusty or the virile crayfish I postulated earlier either, but rather a spring crayfish. Get a better shot of mouth / mandibles. Need to see if shearing surfaces straight or not. Can you catch an adult male? Even if not sexually competent, an adult male will more likely exhibit coloration consistent with its species than a juvenile animal.
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