Note: Unless otherwise stated, all fish are alive upon photographing and released into their environments.
Note the Xanthic Form. Photo Credit: Fabrice Jaine
NUMBER: 20221109
SPECIES: Blue Crab, Callinectes sapidus Rathbun, 1896[1]
SPECIMEN: 1 rare all-blue color variant
OTHER NAMES: Atlantic Blue Crab, Chesapeake Blue Crab,
DATE, TIME: 9 November 2022, 3:37 AM
LOCALITY: Near Cobb Island, Chesapeake Bay
LATIDUE, LONGITUDE: 38.254184, -76.841929
DISTRIBUTION: Atlantic and Gulf coasts, from Nova Scotia through the Gulf of Mexico and to Uruguay.
SIMILAR SPECIES: Ornate Blue Crab, Calinectes ornatus Ordway, 1863 appears the same, but adults are smaller than shown, and have 6, not 4 frontial teeth on the carapace.
OBSERVERS: Dr. Ernest H. Williams, Jr.,[2,3,5,6] and Dr. Lucy Bunkley-Williams[2,4,5,7]
REFERENCES:
<>Anonymous. 2023. Delaware Surf Fishing. This true blue crab is rare. https://www.delaware-surf-fishing.com/this-true-blue-crab-is-rare/#:~:text=A%20completely%20blue%2C%20blue%20claw,only%20commercial%20crabbers%20catch%20them.
<>Boycourt, L. 2018. All-blue Blue Crab-found in York River. Chesapeake Bay Magaine https://chesapeakebaymagazine.com/all-blue-blue-crab-found-in-york-river/
<>Arena, R. 2020. True blue: Rare crab caught near Morgan City [Louisiana]. Louisiana Sportsman. Outdoor Updates. 2 November. https://www.louisianasportsman.com/outdoor-updates/true-blue-rare-crab-caught-near-morgan-city/
<>Castleberry, T. 2019. NC fisherman catches rare all-blue crab. WECT News. https://www.wect.com/2019/07/26/nc-fisherman-catches-rare-all-blue-crab/
<>Dietrich, T. 2018. York River watermen catch rare all-blue Blue Crab. Daily Press. https://www.dailypress.com/news/dp-nws-blue-blue-crab-20180806-story.html
<>Malmquist, D. 2018. Once in a blue moon: Crabber catches rare all-blue Blue Crab. William and Marry News Archive. 31 July. https://www.wm.edu/news/stories/2018/once-in-a-blue-moon-crabber-catches-rare-all-blue-blue-crab.php
<>Williams, E. H., Jr. and L. Bunkley-Williams. 2021. The first report of an Albino/Blue Bi-hemispheric Chimera Blue Crab, Callinectes sapidus Rathbun, chimera. iNaturalist #93671783, 4 September 2021 (open access) [602].
<>Williams, E. H., Jr. and L. Bunkley-Williams. 2021. Partial albino Blue Crab, Calinectes sapidus Rathbun. iNaturalist #93812431, 5 September 2021 (open access) [603].
<>Williams, E. H. Jr. and L. Bunkley-Williams. 2021. Melanistic Blue Crab, Calinectes sapidus Rathbun. iNaturalist #103210867, 17 December (open access), ResearchGate [635].
<>Williams, E. H., Jr. and L. Bunkley-Williams. 2023. A rare all-blue Blue Crab, Callinectes sapidus Rathbun, in Chesapeake Bay. iNaturalist #???, 12 June 2023 (open access), ResearchGate [849].
<>Williams, E. H., Jr., C. D. Miller, M. J. Dowgiallo, and L. Bunkley-Williams 2022. First indication of pigment incitation due to injury in the Blue Crab, Calinectus sapidus Rathburn. Research Quality Report, iNaturalist #???, 22 September (open access), ResearchGate [698]
<>Williams, E. H., Jr., C. D. Miller, M. J. Dowgiallo, and L. Bunkley-Williams. 2022. First report of completely duplicated gonopods, occurring in a Blue Crab, Callinectes sapidus Rathbun, in Maryland. iNaturalist #141625605, ResearchGate, 8 November 2022 (open access) [711].
FOOTNOTES:
[1]Identification was peer-reviewed, text edited and usually condensed. The original text is in our reprint #815 and ResearchBase. [2]West University, South Africa; Adjunct Professors, Research Field Station, Florida Gulf Coast University, 5164 Bonita Beach Road, Bonita Springs, FL 34134; [3]Dept. Marine Sciences, University of Puerto Rico (retired); [4]Dept. Biology, UPR (retired); [5]920 St. Andrews Blvd, Naples, FL 34113-8943; [6]e-mail ermest.williams1@upr.edu, ORCID 0000-0003-0913-3013; [7]e-mail lucy.williams1@upr.edu, ORCID 0000-0003-1390-911x
Any guesses out there, oarfish seems likely candidate, just could not find any photos of a juvenile this small. Thanks for your help!
How do you add "cf." in iNaturalist? The Oahu population of Ancistrus has been called Ancistrus cf. temminckii.
https://nas.er.usgs.gov/queries/FactSheet.aspx?SpeciesID=760
Wild tessera morph
ENDEMIK UTARA TAMAN NASIONAL LORE LINDU (SULAWESI)
This longhorn beetle was laying eggs on the trunk of a weakened mulberry tree.
West side of Route 206 across and up the road from Wagon Wheel Diner
Looking down from the jetty, a marvelous scene of epic scope! A bajillion soldier crabs moving in groups and waves, with the front of receding water apparently the most prime spot, worth braving the numerous toadfish patrolling the edge and waiting for the right time to lunge forward in the shallows and run away with a crab. Often they wouldn't get the crab-- it was a bit fast for me to see, but looked like the crab would pinch them in the snoot-- and sometimes when they did get a crab the competition from other fish would be so fierce that the crab would get dropped and escape to shore.
Reddish-brown crab. Never seen a shell so textured so I’m not sure if it’s due to age or species. Some friends suggested a type of box crab, but it’s not as gnarly as some of the photos I’ve seen. We untangled him from a net that we removed from a shipwreck site in North Carolina - The Caribsea. Docked in Swansboro, NC.
Sergeant Major also present
I captured these photos of a copperhead in a tree feeding on cicadas as they molted.
Trus Madi Entomology Camp, Nuluhon Trusmadi Forest Reserve, Keningau District, Sabah, Borneo. Lower montane dipterocarp forest, 1150 m.
at light sheet at night, ID by Isaac Arias Cespedes
Alnus maritima subsp. georgiensis J.A. Schrad. & W.R. Graves
The third photo compares A. maritima (1) to A. serrulata (2), which were growing together at this site.
My thanks to Joel McNeal for bringing me to this site.
Manko Maru wreck