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You are here:   OldClasses > 2012 > Dardanus megistos | Storm Martin

 

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Dardanus megistos

White-spotted hermit crab

Storm Martin (2012)

Dardanus megistos
 

 

Fact Sheet

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Summary


Physical Description


Size


Morphology


Ecology


Feeding Ecology


Predators


Symbiosis


Habitat


Life History & Behaviour


Population Structure


Reproduction


Development


Shell Selection (Experiment)


Anatomy & Physiology


Digestive System


Circulatory and Excretory Systems


Nervous and Sensory Systems


Musculature and Exoskeleton


Respiratory System


Evolution & Systematics


Systematics


Fossil Record


Biogeographic Distribution


Conservation & Threats


References & Links

Physical Description

Daranus megistos is a large, attractive and immediately recognisable hermit crab. Growing to 30cm, though typically of more modest sizes from the reef flat, D. megistos is certainly the largest species of hermit crab from the waters of Heron Island. D. megistos is coloured a deep red blending to an orange-yellow dorsally and patterned with distinct black-lined white spots of various sizes. It has a hairy appearance, being covered with long setae, densely so on the pereopods but sparsely from the carapace. In this way and together with its size, it is initially mistakable only to D. lagopodes on Heron Island, another hairy species. The carapace of D. megistos is quite elongate, black vein-like lines extend across the gill chambers and the abdomen is of a more monochromous dark red with more regular small white spots. Typical of diogenid hermit crabs, including Dardanus, the left cheliped is larger and D. megistos is suspected to be sexually dimorphic, males being larger and with a larger left cheliped.

 

Photo: Arnault Gauthier, Heron Island, 2012

Classification

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