Key to Australian Freshwater and Terrestrial Invertebrates



Phylum Arthropoda, Subphylum Crustacea



Common name: crustaceans

Crustaceans are an extremely diverse group including animals such as crabs, lobsters, isopods, shrimp and barnacles. Like all arthropods, crustaceans have a segmented body and segmented limbs and a thick chitinous cuticle called an exoskeleton. Crustaceans have three major body segments: a head with two pairs of antennae, a thorax from which more than four pairs of legs are attached, and an abdomen. They can range in size from microscopic plankton (< 1 mm long) to giant crabs (the Japanese spider crab has a leg span 4.3 m), and have adapted to nearly all environments. Most crustaceans live in marine or freshwater habitats, but some groups are completely terrestrial. There are over 8,000 described species of crustacean in Australia, and almost 70,000 species known worldwide. Crustaceans are grouped into five classes: Branchipoda, Ostracoda, Remipedia, Maxillopoda and Malacostraca.





References and further information


ABRS Australian Faunal Directory: Crustacea
Atlas of Living Australia: Crustacea
Encyclopedia of Life: Crustacea
Tree of Life: Arthropoda: Crustacea
Australian Museum, crustaceans
Guide to Marine Zooplankton of South Eastern Australia
Lucid Key to the families of aquatic crustaceans
Marine Education Society of Australasia, crustaceans