Halocaridina rubra explained

Halocaridina rubra, the Hawaiian red shrimp or volcano shrimp is a small red shrimp of the family Atyidae, with the common Hawaiian name Hawaiian: {{okina (meaning "red shrimp").[1]

Description and distribution

Halocaridina rubra are small red shrimp, which can also appear yellow or orange, and are rarely longer than 1.51NaN1. They have a short and pointed rostrum, up to the end of the basal segment of the antennular peduncle. It is dorsoventrally depressed, being broadly triangular in dorsal view and narrow in lateral view. It does not have teeth or spines.[2]

They are typically found in brackish water pools near the sea shore, sometimes in large numbers. Such pools are referred to as anchialine pools (from the Greek Greek, Modern (1453-);: anchialos = near the sea). They have also been found in caverns in the coral plains near the seashore and wells close to the ocean.[3] Halocaridina rubra is endemic to the Hawaiian Islands, and most commonly found in anchialine pools in fresh lava substrates on Hawaiʻi and Maui Island; it has also been found in limestone karst pools and hypogeal habitats in limestone on older islands, such as Oʻahu. Its habitat is unique and sparsely represented on five of the eight high Hawaiian Islands (Maui, Kahoʻolawe, Oʻahu, Molokaʻi and Hawaiʻi).

Ecology

Hawaiian: {{okina are herbivorous and detritivorous shrimp occupying both hypogeal (subterranean) and epigeal (surface) anchialine waters.[4] Typical food of Hawaiian: {{okina is algal and bacterial mats on the surface of rocks and other substrates in anchialine pools. Chelipeds are adapted for scraping and filtering of algal-bacterial layers.[1] Serrated setae scrape the substrate surface, and filamentous setae collect the loosened food materials. The latter can also act as filters for filter feeding during phytoplankton blooms.[1] The grazing activity of this shrimp is essential in maintaining the integrity of the crust, an actively growing matrix of plants, bacteria, diatoms, protozoans, and underlying siliceous and carbonate materials. Halocaridina is well adapted to the epigeal-hypogeal habitat in the pools. It reproduces in the subterranean portion of the habitat.[1]

Aquaria

Recent popularity of Hawaiian: {{okina as a low-maintenance pet in Hawaiʻi and elsewhere has brought this otherwise obscure decapod crustacean into popular consciousness. A long-lived species, Hawaiian: {{okina have been known to live for as long as 20 years in captivity. Sexes are difficult to distinguish, except when gravid females carry clusters of red/maroon eggs under their pleopods. Early larvae are planktonic filter-feeders.

They occasionally molt their shells, which can be seen as silvery exoskeletons at the bottom of the tank. There may be some evidence that Hawaiian: {{okina mate after molting, or that molting and mating may be related.[5]

Stressed ʻōpaeʻula tend to hide, though if given plenty of places to hide they are more likely to venture into open spaces. Hawaiian: {{okina are social creatures and are rarely seen fighting, in fact when unstressed they often cluster together while eating or sunbathing. Shrimp in tanks can also be seen cleaning themselves or swimming slow laps.

The shrimp is the animal featured in the Ecosphere closed-system aquarium.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Julie H. Bailey-Brock & Richard E. Brock . 1993 . Feeding, reproduction, and sense organs of the Hawaiian anchialine shrimp Halocaridina rubra (Atyidae) . . 47 . 4 . 338–355 . 10125/2024.
  2. Holthuis . L. . 1963 . On red coloured shrimps (Decapoda, Caridea) from tropical land-locked saltwater pools. . Zoologische Mededelingen . 38 . 16 . 261–279.
  3. Edmondson . C. H. . 1935 . New and rare Polynesian Crustacea . Bernice P. Bishop Museum - Occasional Papers . X . 24.
  4. Banner . A. H. . Banner . D. M. . July 1960 . Contributions to the Knowledge of the Alpheid Shrimp of the Pacific Ocean: Part VII. On Metabetaeus Borradaile, with a New Species from Hawaii . Pacific Science . 14 . 3 . 299–303 . Biostor.
  5. Web site: The Amazing Creature!. www.fukubonsai.com. 2015-12-16.