General information
Distribution map
Photographs
Illustrations
NC Physiographic Region(s): coastal plain
River Basin(s): Northeast Cape Fear, White Oak, may be expanding into lower reaches of Neuse (has been found in Craven Co.)
Adult Habitat: “temporary ponds, pools, and burrows (secondary burrower)” (Hobbs Jr. 1989); “temporary static waters; can burrow into substrate during drought; rivers, ponds, ditches, and borrow pits” (NHP ICAS 1999); swampy (often acidic) streams
Juvenile Habitat: same as adults, burrows
Reproductive Season: n/a
Species associates: P. acutus but usually found alone
Conservation status: placed on North Carolina Watch List (W.F. Adams and J.E. Cooper in Clamp 1999); considered by Taylor et al. (1996) to be a species of Special Concern
Identification references: Cooper 1998, Hobbs Jr. 1989, Hobbs 1991
Taxonomic Description:
body shape: cylindrical; fairly small speciesNotes: North Carolina endemic; part of the planirostris group; may be expanding its range into the lower Neuse River Basin via canals (Cooper and Braswell 1995)
coloration: light brown or tan with highlights in pastels (greens, pinks, salmon) and often speckled with dark spots or mottled
spines: branchiostegal spine present; marginal spines or tubercles usually present; others lacking
rostrum: short, blunt, fairly flat; usually with marginal spines or tubercles
areola: wide
chelae: having strong dorsolongitudinal ridges; not robust but fairly large for this genus
other characteristics: n/a
form I male gonopod: tip of gonopods angled less than 90 degrees from main shaft (terminal elements directed caudodistally); cephalic process not broad, situated mesial to and partly obscured by central projection; caudal process not flared, forming compressed plate along caudolateral margin of distal part of gonopod; mesial process directed caudomesially