donya
New member
Ah, You DO write here too. I thought I remembered Your name"¦
A little bit of writing, but mostly lurking. I like to think I'm quite good at lurking.
Yeah, Berkeley normally is a really serious institution
Only normally? Not a big Berkeley fan? :lol:
I thought for a long time "when a scientist says this or that it must be so" but they are humans as everyone else and wrong IDs etc. are not uncommon.
Since I am in one area science and have explored a few others on the way to my present field, I know this fact well. Some number of years before I became interested in hermit crab behavior, I was persuing various things about Ampullarid snails (the freshwater "apple snails"). The species descriptions that had been passed down through the literature had hobbyists hunting for a snail that is either incredibly good at hiding or does not match its description. The one museum shell collection I was able to dig through in person also had some funny business going on with the labels.
That is why I do not trust CalPhoto in this case BLINDLY. One would have to search the original description of C. digueti at best"¦
And that is why it is not the only resource I use, just the one that is most convenient many times online. I end up digging through badly scanned pdfs plenty as well. Citations of descriptive publications are also useful, provided they give enough information. Of course those are not always easily found either.
or ask an up-to-date scientist who could know.
I would assume someone who has studied the species directly would be best to ask, but no names come to mind without doing some looking first.
So I'll post a fabulous picture of Mr. Crab. What do you think?
This image didn't show up when I posted before...but that looks much more Calcinus-ish to me than any Clibanarius I've seen.
Just to followup on the red/green/etc. eyestalks issue: I have some of the animal I described as "C. digueti" and checked them last night. While I'm not sure I'd call the eyestalks green (maybe it would be green in some individuals...there is variation), red is definitely the wrong word.