Neolithodes grimaldii, the porcupine crab,[2] is a species of king crab in the family Lithodidae. This large red crab is found in cold deep waters in the North Atlantic and often caught as a bycatch in fisheries for Greenland turbot (Greenland halibut). As suggested by its common name, the carapace and legs are covered in long spines.[3]
Distribution and habitat
The porcupine crab is found on muddy bottoms on the continental slope in deep waters of the North Atlantic.[4][5] In the western Atlantic, it ranges from eastern Canada and Greenland south as far as North Carolina in the United States. In the eastern Atlantic, it ranges from Iceland to Madeira, Portugal and Cape Verde, including the Porcupine Seabight and Rockall Trough off Ireland.[6][7] It has been recorded at depths of 329–5,230 m (1,079–17,159 ft), but mostly at 1,000–3,000 m (3,300–9,800 ft) in water that is about 2–5 °C (36–41 °F).[6][8] Exceptionally, living singles have been caught in very shallow water, likely the result of turning icebergs suddenly forcing them up from the deep.[9]
Based on radio tagging, some individuals will stay in a region for months, but others may move quite long distances.[2]
Appearance
This deep red crab is covered in spines, which are long and robust in large adults, and very long and thin in young.[4] It has a carapace length ("nose" to "rump") that is up to 18 cm (7.1 in), a leg span up to 1.2 m (3.9 ft) and can weigh as much as 2.28 kg (5.0 lb).[3][5] Females are somewhat smaller than males;[3] in a study off Canada average carapace length for healthy adults was about 9.5 and 12 cm (3.7 and 4.7 in) for females and males respectively.[7] They are often victims of Briarosaccus callosus (family Peltogastridae), a parasiticbarnacle that causes sterility in the crab and also will use many other king crab species around the world as a host. In the porcupine crab, males infected by this barnacle average somewhat smaller than healthy males, while infected females average somewhat larger than healthy females.[7]
Fishing
Fisheries for Greenland turbot (Greenland halibut) can have porcupine crabs as a bycatch, sometimes in large quantities; in 1996 alone several hundred thousand tonnes were caught off Canada.[3][10] Despite this, the porcupine crab has not been targeted by fisheries because of the great depth it inhabits (unlike several other large king crab species that typically inhabit shallower depths and are heavily targeted by fisheries). It is, however, considered to have potential as a future fishing resource.[7][2] As long as the porcupine crab is not injured during capture and release from the bottom gillnet, they have a high survival rate.[7]
^ abcd"Neolithodes grimaldii"(PDF). Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture. Archived from the original(PDF) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 3 July 2015.
^Heegaard, P. E. (1941). "The Zoology of East Greenland – Decapod Crustaceans". Meddelelser om Grønland. 126 (6): 1–72.
^He, Pingguo (August 2005). "Characteristics of bycatch of porcupine crabs, Neolithodes grimaldii (Milne-Edwards and Bouvier, 1894) from deepwater turbot gillnets in the northwest Atlantic". Fisheries Research. 74 (1–3): 35–43. doi:10.1016/j.fishres.2005.04.002.