💜💜💜HORSESHOECRAB GIRL !!!! :-)💜💜💜
(blog-post about her creation)
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💜💜💜HORSESHOECRAB GIRL !!!! :-)💜💜💜
(blog-post about her creation)

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horshoe crab!!
Have you seen a horseshoe crab (Family: Limulidae)?
I have now
Yes, in photos/videos
Yes, irl
I'm not sure
The first photo is of a Chinese horseshoe crab, the second is of a group of Atlantic horseshoe crabs. There are four species of extant horseshoe crab. They are the only surviving xiphosurans.
horseshoe crab walking on the beach ©
Atlantic Horseshoe Crabs (Limulus polyphemus) (c) SaritaWolf - please do not repost
God, what have you done? You’re a pink pony crab, and you scuttle at the club…
(Soon to be stickers)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Uncharismatic Fact of the Day
Can you do a backstroke? The horseshoe crab can! These creatures spend most of their time crawling along the ocean floor, but when they need to they can turn over and swim on their backs at a breakneck 0.54 kph (0.34 mph), using all six of their legs and the thick gills along their bellies-- called book gills-- to generate momentum.
(Image: An Atlantic horseshoe crab (Limulus polyphemus) by John Tlumacki)
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Indo-Pacific Horseshoe Crab (Tachypleus gigas), family Limulidae, order Xiphosura, Odisha, India
Horseshoe Crabs (Limulidae) have been around relatively unchanged since at least the early Triassic period, 250 million years ago.
They live in the ocean but return to land to lay eggs
They are not crabs, but are most closely related to Arachnids.
There are 4 living species, 3 in South and Southeast Asia and 1 in Eastern North America
Photo by Firos_AK
Tachypleus syriacus was a horseshoe crab from the late Cretaceous (~100-95 million years ago) of what is now Lebanon.
Closely related to modern tri-spine horseshoe crabs, it displayed a similar level of sexual dimorphism. Females grew to at least 25cm long (~10"), with rounded front edges to their carapaces and shorter rear spines, while males were around 30% smaller with a scalloped shape to the front of their carapaces.
One recently described female specimen also preserves distinctive nodules around the rim of its carapace, which may represent some sort of sensory structure.
This particular specimen is also unique for preserving a coprolite in the process of being expelled from the horseshoe crab's body – that's right, it died while pooping.
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