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Crayfish Glossary
These aren't the definitions you'll find listed formally in the back of texts but are meant to assist the novice. Terms in the definitions that are underlined are also listed in the glossary.
Term
Definition
abdomen
The "tail" portion of the crayfish, posterior to the cephalothorax.
acumen
The most apical portion of the rostrum, sometimes delineated by marginal spines; varies in shape from rounded and wide to slender and long.
annulus ventralis
The seminal receptacle (where sperm are placed during copulation) of females; quasi-circular structure on ventral surface, midway between the abdomen and cephalothorax, between the 4th and 5th pereiopods.
areola
The space found on the dorsal surface of the carapace between the 2 carapace plates; can be wide (e.g., stream-dwellers) or narrow to linear (e.g., burrowers).
apex/apical
Directional term indicating the tip or end of an object (furthest from its base).
appendage
Any part of the body that is attached but most of the part is free (e.g., antennae, walking legs, swimmerets).
branchiostegal
Directional term indicating a region of the side of the carapace nearest the head (between the head and hepatic region).
brood
The young (offspring) produced as a result of mating; often carried as eggs or small instars on the ventral abdomen of the female.
burrow
The "house" of hypogean species; the subteranean tunnel(s); usually having a circular opening (on the ground in floodplains, in banks, or stream bottoms), and sometimes having a chimney.
carapace
The exoskeleton of a crayfish that covers the cephalothorax portion.
caudal
Directional term indicating "toward the animal's tail", or posterior.
caudal process
The caudal-most terminal element of a gonopod; found in
Procambarus
species (in NC).
central projection
The central, or "main", terminal element of a gonopod extending directly from the shaft; found in all species; C-shaped in
Cambarus
and
Fallicambarus
, long, straight, and slender in
Orconectes
, and variable but short in
Procambarus
.
cephalic process
The cephalic-most terminal element of a gonopod; found in
Procambarus
species (in NC).
cephalic
Directional term used to indicate "toward the animal's head", or anterior.
cephalothorax
Indicating the portion of the body containing the head and thorax, anterior to the abdomen.
cervical
Directional term indicating the region on the side of the carapace approximating the area between the head and thorax; along cervical groove.
cervical groove
Groove (sinuous but approaches linear at an angle) along side of carapace; differentiates head and thorax region.
chela (chelae)
The "claw" or pincer, composed of 2 fingers, the dactyl and propodus (entire first walking leg is called the cheliped).
chimney
Evidence of a subterranean burrow (not all burrows have chimneys) indicated by a cylindrical pile of mudballs elevated above the surface.
corneous
Slightly harded yet pliable proteinaceous material; often found at tips of form-I gonopods (see sclerotized).
costate
Descriptor, usually of tubercles, that indicates that the tubercles are strong, raised, or rib-like.
dactyl
The moveable finger of a chela.
decapod
A 10-legged crustacean (e.g., crayfishes, shrimps, lobsters, crabs).
detritus
Decaying organic material (leaf matter, decomposing aquatic vegetation, dead animal tissue) often found on stream bottoms.
distal
Directional term indicating "toward the free (unattached) end" of an object (i.e. gonopod, leg, spine); away from the body.
dorsal
Directional term indicating the "back" or "top" of an animal or object.
epigean
An animal that lives above-ground (e.g., stream-dwelling crayfishes), as opposed to hypogean.
excavate
Indicating that there is a depression, large shallow pit, or concave area.
exoskeleton
The hard chitinous outer covering (skeleton) of arthropods; this covering is shed during molting.
exuvium
The remaining exoskeleton after an animal has molted.
finger
The 2 long appendages of a chela, the dactyl and the propodus, used for grasping or defending.
first-form male
A male that is reproductively active, having form-I gonopods.
second-form male
A male that is not reproductively active, having form-II gonopods.
form-I gonopod
The reproductive structure of a reproductively active (breeding) male; terminal elements are usually sharp and sclerotized.
form-II gonopod
The reproductive structure of a male that is not in its reproduction phase; terminal elements are usually blunt/rounded and not sclerotized.
fossa
The plating on the annulus ventralis.
gills
The feathery structures that an animal uses for respiration; found tucked under the carapace on the sides.
gonopods
The first pair (most cephalic in position) of abdominalpleopods ("swimmerets") that are used by males in sperm transfer.
hepatic
Directional term indicating the region posterior to the branchiostegal region but anterior to the cervical region.
hooks
Clasping devices on ischia of certain walking legs used in copulation; much more highly developed in first-form males.
hypogean
An animal that lives below-ground (e.g., burrowing crayfishes), as opposed to epigean.
hyporheic
Referring to the region of water exchange between groundwater and surface water; often inhabited by numerous invertebrates.
inflated
Indicating that a structure is "puffy" or bulbous, rather than flat or spatulate.
instar
Any development stage between molts, generally referring to first several-very young animals.
"in berry"
Term used to describe a female crayfish carrying eggs or a brood of young attached to her abdomen (ventral).
ischia
The third segment from the base of segmented legs; ischia of certain walking legs may contain hooks in reproductively active males.
lateral
Directional term indicating "to the side, away from midline of animal".
lentic
Standing water environments (e.g., lakes, ponds, backwaters, swamps, temporary pools).
littoral zone
The area of water shallow enough to allow rooted macrophytes (aquatic plants) to grow; generally indicates waterbody edges.
longitudinal
Directional term indicating along the main axis, as in "longitudinal ridges" on chela fingers.
lotic
Flowing waters (e.g., brooks, streams, rivers).
marginal
Directional term; in crayfishes, describes spines placed at base of acumen on rostrum.
mesial
Directional term indicating "to the side, toward midline of animal".
mesial process
The second "main" terminal element of a gonopod; found in all species; bulbous in
Cambarus
, spatulate in
Fallicambarus
, similar to the central projection in
Orconectes
, and variable but short in
Procambarus
.
molting
The process of growing by shedding the exoskeleton and regrowing a new one (begins soft, gets hard through time).
palm
The portion of the chela that is not composed of fingers; the widest part to which fingers are attached.
pereiopods
The 5 pairs of walking legs attached to the cephalothorax (as opposed to the 5 "swimmerets").
pleopods
The 5 pairs of abdominal appendages known as "swimmerets" (as opposed to the 5 pairs of walking legs attached to the cephalothorax).
postorbital ridge
The ridge (raised area) directly behind the eyes on the head portion of the carapace.
propodus
The immoveable, or attached finger of a chela.
proximal
Directional term indicating "toward the attached end" of an object (i.e. gonopod, leg, spine); close to the body.
punctation
Indicates pitting, or marked with many small pits in the surface (e.g., of chelae or carapace).
rostrum
The "nose" of the crayfish; the portion of the carapace on the head region that is anterior to the eyes.
sclerotized
Comprised of a corneous substance, orange to orangeish-yellow or tan-brown in color.
setae
Projections, or "hairs" from the surface of objects (e.g., of chelae or carapace).
sexually dimorphic
Indicating that females and males of a taxon can be distinguished visually.
shaft
Referring to the main portion of a gonopod; the long, cylindrical segment along the main axis.
shoulder
A rounded portion extending from the shaft of an appendage (usually a gonopod).
spatulate
Descriptor of a flat, rather than a rounded or bulbous, structure.
spine
Similar to a tubercle but ending in severe point; used as defence and ornamentation on body parts.
suborbital angle
The angle of the carapace around (behind) the eye; can be obtuse or acute, or variations on these.
spatulate
Describing a structure as flat, rather than bulbous or rounded.
terminal elements
Distal projections of gonopods.
tubercle
Raised projetion or bump; similar to a spine, but blunt.
vaulted
Used to describe the carapace of burrowing crayfishes; raised rather than dorso-ventrally compressed, presumably to allow more room for gill respiration; vaulted carapaces often have very narrow or linear areolas.
ventral
Directional term indicating the "belly" or "bottom/underside" of an animal or object.