Color is yellow-brown, with black spots.
Differs from Praunus inermis by larger length of the scaphopodite.
Within Russian waters occurs in the western part of the Barents Sea.
Littoral boreal species.
The side edges of the front of the carapace are sharp. Large eyes bulge out neyond the edge of the body. Scaphocerite of the antennae has a linear shape, its length exceeds its width by 8-9; the outer edge smooth. The telson contains a deep and narrow cut in the center; the edges carry up to 26 spines on each side, the edges of the cut carry numerous small spines and 2 large spines at the end. The fourth pair of pleopods in males has long exopodites.
Up to 26 mm.
Praunus flexuosus, known as the chameleon shrimp, is a species of opossum shrimp found in European waters. It reaches 26 mm (1.0 in) long, with a distinctly bent body, and closely resembles Praunus neglectus. It lives in shallow water and tolerates a wide range of salinities. It is found from northern France to the Baltic Sea, and was introduced to North America in the mid 20th century.
Praunus flexuosus is a long, slender animal, with a pronounced bend in the abdomen.[1] It reaches sexual maturity at a length of around 18 millimetres (0.71 in), but can go on to attain a length of 26 mm (1.0 in).[1] Its colouration is highly variable, ranging from brown or red to green, which accounts for its common name of "chamaeleon shrimp".[2]
Praunus flexuosus is very similar to the related species P. neglectus. The two can be differentiated by the following characters:[1]
Praunus flexuosus was the first mysidacean species ever to be formally described, when Otto Friedrich Müller described it under the name Cancer flexuosa in 1776.[3]
Praunus flexuosus lives along the coast of the north Atlantic Ocean between 40° north and 71° north, and in the Baltic Sea.[1] There is only one doubtful record from further south than Roscoff.[1] It is "the only documented non-native marine zooplankton species established on the East Coast [of North America]".[4] It was first discovered in North America in 1960, on the north side of Cape Cod,[5] and has since colonised as far north as Nova Scotia.[6] This colonisation may have occurred after P. flexuosus was transported as a fouling animal on ships' hulls during the Second World War.[7] It was only discovered around the coast of Iceland in 1970, but has since proved to be common along Iceland's south-west coast.[7] This introduction may also have been facilitated by wartime convoys (see Battle of the Atlantic).[7]
P. flexuosus can tolerate salinities of 2‰–33‰.[8] It is often found on algae, and is most closely associated with the seaweed Fucus vesiculosus.[9] It lives in shallow water, and is often found around artificial constructions, such as docks.[10] It is an omnivore, feeding on debris and preying on small crustaceans, especially harpacticoid copepods,[11] but consumes a greater proportion of macrozooplankton than other common littoral mysids, such as Neomysis integer and Praunus inermis.[12] P. fleuosus is less gregarious than species such as N. integer.[9] When it detects a predator nearby, using a combination of visual and chemical cues, P. flexuosus hides among vegetation.[9]
Praunus flexuosus has two generations per year. A population overwinters, and produces a spring generation that appears in May or June, before dying off in the summer.[11] Some of the spring generation reach sexual maturity and reproduce in the autumn, producing the generation which will reproduce the following spring.[11] Females release eggs into a brood pouch or marsupium, where they are held until they hatch.[11]
Praunus flexuosus, known as the chameleon shrimp, is a species of opossum shrimp found in European waters. It reaches 26 mm (1.0 in) long, with a distinctly bent body, and closely resembles Praunus neglectus. It lives in shallow water and tolerates a wide range of salinities. It is found from northern France to the Baltic Sea, and was introduced to North America in the mid 20th century.
De geknikte aasgarnaal (Praunus flexuosus) is een aasgarnalensoort uit de familie van de Mysidae.[1] De wetenschappelijke naam van de soort is voor het eerst geldig gepubliceerd in 1776 door Müller.
Bronnen, noten en/of referentiesTangmysid er et rekelignende krepsdyr.
Den kan bli opptil 25 mm lang. Fargen varierer mye og tilpasses omgivelsene. Arten sitter ofte godt kamuflert blant tang, tare eller ålegras.
Arten er naturlig utbredt i det nordøstre Atlanterhavet inkludert Østersjøen og finnes sør til Den engelske kanal. I Norge er tangmysid meget vanlig nordover til Troms. I midten av det tyvende århundre dukket arten opp ved Island og østkysten av Nord-Amerika. Den spredte seg antakelig ved hjelp av skip som deltok i konvoier under andre verdenskrig.
Tangmysid er et rekelignende krepsdyr.
Den kan bli opptil 25 mm lang. Fargen varierer mye og tilpasses omgivelsene. Arten sitter ofte godt kamuflert blant tang, tare eller ålegras.
Arten er naturlig utbredt i det nordøstre Atlanterhavet inkludert Østersjøen og finnes sør til Den engelske kanal. I Norge er tangmysid meget vanlig nordover til Troms. I midten av det tyvende århundre dukket arten opp ved Island og østkysten av Nord-Amerika. Den spredte seg antakelig ved hjelp av skip som deltok i konvoier under andre verdenskrig.