n A member of the class Crustacea in the phylum Arthropada Includes shirps, lobsters, crabs and water fleas Most forms are aquatic, although a few are terrestrial, living in damp places
A crustacean is an animal with a hard shell and several pairs of legs, which usually lives in water. Crabs, lobsters, and shrimps are crustaceans. an animal such as a lobster or a crab that has a hard outer shell and several pairs of legs, and usually lives in water (crustaceus, from crusta; CRUST). Any member of the 45,000 arthropod species in the subphylum Crustacea. Distributed worldwide, crustaceans are distinguished by having two pairs of antenna-like appendages in front of the mouth and other paired appendages near the mouth that act like jaws. Most species are marine, including shrimps and barnacles. Some, including crayfishes, live in freshwater habitats; others (e.g., sand fleas, land crabs, and sow bugs) live in moist terrestrial environments. The typical adult body is composed of a series of segments (somites) either fused or linked to each other by flexible areas that form movable joints. The carapace (shell) varies in thickness among species and must be periodically molted to allow growth. Many species of marine crustaceans are scavengers, and many (including copepods and krill) are significant components of the diets of larger organisms. See also decapod
a type of aquatic arthropod with ten appendages, such as a crab, shrimp, or lobster
Animals that wear a segmented shell and have segmented legs are arthropods, such as insects and crustaceans Crustaceans are arthropods that live in the water and breathe by gills, such as lobsters, barnacles, crabs, and shrimps
A group of freshwater and saltwater animals having no backbone, with jointed legs and a hard shell made of chitin Includes shrimp, crabs, lobsters, and crayfish
An arthropod with five pairs of appendages on the head (including two pairs of antennae for sensing of the environment, a pair of mandibles for manipulating food, and two pairs maxillae for feeding), and separate thoracic and abdominal areas (often with visible segments in each) with appendages attached to each body segment (including decapods, copepods, amphipods, and many other forms)
Arthropod animals found in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial habitats including shrimps, lobsters, crabs, barnacles, water fleas, etc
A Class of segmented Arthropod organisms with an exoskeleton, a pair of appendages on each segment and two pairs of antennae, includes crabs, lobsters, crayfish, shrimp, wood lice, barnacles and water fleas or Daphnia
A group of freshwater and salt-water animals having no backbone, with jointed legs and a hard shell made of chitin Includes shrimp, crabs, lobsters, and crayfish
animal, usually aquatic, with two pairs of antennae on the head, jointed legs and a hard shell
Any of various predominantly aquatic arthropods of the class Crustacea, including lobsters, crabs, shrimps, and barnacles, having segmented bodies, a chitinous exoskeleton, and paired, jointed limbs (appendages)
A member of a class within the Arthropods which has five pairs of legs, two pairs of antennae, head and thorax joined, and calcareous deposits in the exoskeleton (e g crayfish, crabs, and shrimp)
An invertebrate animal with a hard shell and many jointed legs Prawns, crabs, lobsters and crayfish are crustaceans
any mainly aquatic arthropod usually having a segmented body and chitinous exoskeleton
Member of the aquatic class Crustacea of the phylum Arthropoda A heterogeneous and important estuarine group including shrimp, crabs, barnacles, and others
A large group of aquatic organisms that fish eat Freshwater crustaceans frequently imitated in fly design include crayfish and freshwater shrimp Saltwater crustaceans often imitated in fly design are crabs, shrimp and crayfish
A class of arthropods which breathes by means of gills or similar structures, and have bodies which are covered by a hard shell or crust (e/ g , crabs, lobsters, shrimps, barnacles)
a large class of animals, usually living in or near the water, that have a hard crustlike outer covering (exoskeleton); includes lobsters, crabs, and shrimp
Organisms, generally aquatic, belonging to the taxonomic class Crustacea, which includes crayfish, crabs, shrimp and lobsters, characteristically having a segmented body, a hard external covering, and paired jointed limbs
Invertebrates characterized by a hard outer shell and jointed appendages and bodies They usually live in water and breathe through gills Higher forms of this class include lobsters, shrimp and crawfish; lower forms include barnacles and fish lice