Perisesarma Explained

Perisesarma is a genus of mangrove crabs in the family Sesarmidae (or Grapsidae in some classifications) predominantly found in the Indo-Pacific. Some 23 species are described as of late 2006, with two from West Africa: P. kammermani (De Man, 1883) and P. alberti Rathbun, 1921. They are typically small, semiterrestrial crabs found on the forest floor at low tide. They eat nearly anything they can, and try to eat anything that does not threaten them — including pencils and other objects dropped on the forest floor. The last species of the genus described is P. samawati Gillikin and Schubart (2004). It can be found in East Africa along with P. guttatum, but its sister species is P. eumolpe from Malaysian mangroves.[1] [2]

Species

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A field guide to Kenyan mangroves . David Gillikin & Anouk Verheyden . 2005-12-16.
  2. David P. Gillikin & Christoph D. Schubart . Ecology and systematics of mangrove crabs of the genus Perisesarma (Crustacea: Brachyura: Sesarmidae) from East Africa . . 141 . 3 . 435–445 . 2004 . 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2004.00125.x. free .