Anaspides tasmaniae
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| Anaspides tasmaniae | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Arthropoda |
| Class: | Malacostraca |
| Order: | Anaspidacea |
| Family: | Anaspidesidae |
| Genus: | Anaspides |
| Species: | A. tasmaniae |
| Binomial name | |
| Anaspides tasmaniae | |
Anaspides tasmaniae is a species of freshwater crustacean found in Tasmania.[2] Members of the genus Anaspides are commonly known as Tasmanian mountain shrimp.[3] Mountain shrimp are often referred to as “living fossils”[3][4][5][6] since they have remained morphologically largely unchanged for over 200 million years.[3][5][4]

Anaspides tasmaniae was described by George Malcolm Thomson in 1894[2] on the basis of specimens collected from the summit of Mount Wellington, Tasmania. Thomson suggested a new genus (Anaspides) and a new family (Anaspidea) due to the animal’s unique characteristics. The name Anaspides refers to the total absence of a carapace and is derived from the Ancient Greek ἀν (“an” - lacking) and ἀσπίς (“aspis” - shield).
Anaspides tasmaniae is the type species for the genus,[3] which now includes eight species of mountain shrimp.[4][7]
Despite the common name, mountain shrimp are not true shrimp as they are not members of the order Decapoda. Recent molecular data place them as a sister group to the Euphausiacea (krill).[8][9]
Description
Anaspides tasmaniae can reach up to 35mm in length from the tip of the rostrum to the end of the telson.[3] Its colour varies from light to medium brown.[5] This species can be distinguished from similar species in the genus by the combination of the following features: eyes with a well-developed cornea,[3] an elongated telson with an evenly rounded posterior margin, the form of the antennular inner flagellum and, in males, the presence of two antennular clasping spines.[5]


