General information
Distribution map
Photographs
Illustrations
NC Physiographic Region(s): lower piedmont, coastal plain
River Basin(s): Chowan, Roanoke, Pasquotank, Tar-Pamlico, Neuse, Cape Fear, White Oak, Lumber, Yadkin, Catawba
Adult Habitat: “sluggish to moderately flowing streams and most lentic situations” (Hobbs Jr. 1989); “most common in valley springs where usually collected from pools and runs in leaf litter and dense concentrations of aquatic vascular plants...tertiary burrower…much more abundant below the Fall Line especially in lentic environments, although it does not hesitate to enter lotic environs” (Bouchard 1974); “sluggish streams and rivers to large moderatly flowing and lentic situations, swamps, ditches, sloughs, and ponds, etc. especially in vegetation, leaf litter, etc; secondary burrower” (Williams and Bivens 1996); slow, slack, or stagnant areas (like pools) in piedmont streams; associated with vegetation or woody debris in swamps; “widely tolerant, in most lentic situations in range …” (NHP ICAS 1999)
Juvenile Habitat: same as adults but more associated with littoral areas
Reproductive Season: fall and spring but extended; “amplexus in fall and early winter; brood in spring; one generation per year” (NHP ICAS 1999)
Species associates: many
Conservation status: not protected
Identification references: Cooper 1998, Cooper 1999, Hobbs Jr. 1989, Hobbs 1991
Taxonomic Description:
body shape: cylindrical, large animalNotes: Hobbs Jr. believed this to be a species complex (and split off one species already – P. zonangulus); very difficult to distinguish from P. blandingii where they co-occur (distinguishable only with form I male and can be confusing even then); widely distributed in tidewater areas
coloration: generally reddish-brown carapace with thick dark/black “stripe” on dorsal abdomen; or shades of tan and green with dark speckles or light mottling; blue morphs exist (very rare)
spines: strong cervical, cephalic, branchiostegal, and marginal spines
rostrum: long; with marginal spines and very long spiniform acumen
areola: fairly narrow
chelae: not robust
other characteristics: n/a
form I male gonopod: distal ¼ of shaft striaght; subapical setae arising from promiment knoblike eminence at or near cephalic margin; setae and knob lateral to base of cephalic process, usually hiding part of cephalic process when viewed laterally