Biology:Lacunicambarus freudensteini

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Short description: Species of crayfish

Banded mudbug
Banded Mudbug.jpg
Banded mudbug, Lacunicambarus freudensteini, holotype

Critically Imperiled (NatureServe)[1]
Scientific classification edit
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Malacostraca
Order: Decapoda
Suborder: Pleocyemata
Family: Cambaridae
Genus: Lacunicambarus
Species:
L. freudensteini
Binomial name
Lacunicambarus freudensteini
Glon, 2020

Lacunicambarus freudensteini, the banded mudbug, is a species of North American burrowing crayfish found in Alabama and Mississippi.[2][3]

Description

The banded mudbug is a small (maximum size: ~2–2.5 inches) primary burrowing crayfish. This crayfish is typically blue overall with orange highlights on its joints, although rare bright blue and pink specimens have also been collected.[3] Because of this species' exceedingly small range and overall rarity, this species is ranked as S1 (Critically imperiled) in both states where it occurs (Alabama and Mississippi) and has a NatureServe global rank of G1 (Critically imperiled).[1]

Range

The banded mudbug is a very rare species known only from nine sites in Mobile County, Alabama and Jackson County, Mississippi.[3]

Habitat

The banded mudbug is typically found burrowing in open, non-sloping grasslands with a shallow claypan.[3]

Etymology

The banded mudbug was named after Dr. John Freudenstein.[4] The common name "banded mudbug" refers to the orange bands on the dorsal side of this species and as the fact that it is a primary burrowing crayfish (often called "mudbugs").[3]

References

Wikidata ☰ Q107078619 entry