Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Jonah crab

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Subphylum
  
Crustacea

Infraorder
  
Brachyura

Scientific name
  
Cancer borealis

Rank
  
Species

Phylum
  
Arthropoda

Order
  
Decapoda

Family
  
Cancridae

Higher classification
  
Cancer

Jonah crab Maine Seafood Dealers Weigh Proposed Jonah Crab Fishery Maine

Similar
  
Crab, Cancer irroratus, Crustacean, Florida stone crab, Dungeness crab

Sectioning and shucking jonah crab fisherman s market


The Jonah crab (Cancer borealis) is a marine brachyuran crab that inhabits waters along the east coast of North America from Newfoundland to Florida. Jonah crabs possess a rounded, rough-edged carapace with small light spots, and robust claws with dark brown-black tips. The maximum reported carapace width for males is 222 mm, while females rarely exceed 150 mm.

Contents

Jonah crab Jonah Crab

Habitat and behavior

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Jonah crabs have been reported at depths of up to 750 m. Habitat preferences for Cancer borealis range from rocky substrate in Rhode Island and the Gulf of Maine to silt and clay substrate on the continental slope. It is widely accepted that this species moves offshore in the fall and winter, and females have been documented moving inshore in late spring and summer. The Jonah crab is known to move to areas of preferred temperature for behavioral thermoregulation. The preferred temperature of this animal changes depending on the temperature to which it is acclimated. The estimated average preferred temperature is 15.4 °C (59.7 °F).

Diet

Jonah crab Jonah Crab Claws Taste amp Cooking Tips The Lobster Place

According to stomach content analysis on individuals from the Gulf of Maine, the diet of Cancer borealis consists of mussels, arthropods, snails, and some algal species. Blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) composed more than 50% of analyzed stomach contents.

Fishery

Jonah crab httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons00

Jonah crabs have long been caught as bycatch in lobster traps. In the past twenty years, particularly in New England, landings have increased due to increased fishing pressure and market demand. Landings of Cancer borealis in the United States rose from 2-3 million pounds annually in the 1990s to more than 17 million pounds in 2014. In 2014, 70.05% of landings came from Massachusetts, followed by Rhode Island with 24.43%. Jonah crabs are not managed federally in the United States, but instead are managed by individual states.

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Jonah crab JonahCrabgif

References

Jonah crab Wikipedia