Lybia

For the country in North Africa, see Libya.
Lybia
Hawaiian pompom crab, Lybia edmondsoni
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Crustacea
Class: Malacostraca
Order: Decapoda
Infraorder: Brachyura
Family: Xanthidae
Genus: Lybia
H. Milne-Edwards, 1834 [1]
Type species
Grapse tessellata
Latreille in Milbert, 1812 [2]

Lybia is a genus of small crabs in the family Xanthidae. Their common names include boxer crabs, boxing crabs and pom-pom crabs. They are notable for their mutualism with sea anemones,[3] which they hold in their claws for defense. In return, the anemones get carried around which may enable them to capture more food particles with their tentacles. Boxer crabs use at least three different species of anemones, including Bundeopsis spp. and Triactis producta. The bonding with the anemone is not required for survival, however, and boxer crabs have frequently been known to live without them, sometimes substituting other organisms such as sponges and corals for the sea anemones.

The genus Lybia contains the following species:[2]

  • Lybia australiensis (Ward, 1933)
  • Lybia caestifera (Alcock, 1898)
  • Lybia denticulata Nobili, 1905
  • Lybia edmondsoni Takeda & Miyake, 1970
  • Lybia hatagumoana Sakai, 1961
  • Lybia leptochelis (Zehntner, 1894)
  • Lybia plumosa Barnard, 1947
  • Lybia pugil (Alcock, 1898)
  • Lybia tessellata (Latreille in Milbert, 1812)
  • Lybia tutelina C. G. S. Tan & Ng, 1994

References


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