Crayfishes (Decapoda: Cambaridae) of Oklahoma: identification, distributions, and natural history
Author
Morehouse, Reid L.
Author
Tobler, Michael
text
Zootaxa
2013
3717
2
101
157
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3717.2.1
fad4163f-156b-4f1a-a5e9-c9f48df52e0a
1175-5326
248539
C8CDC011-974C-48B4-9E03-88F570EEDE13
Orconectes nais
(Faxon, 1885)
: Water Nymph Crayfish
General charateristics.
Adults rarely exceed
130 mm
in total length. The carapace is smooth, lightly punctate dorsally, granulate laterally, and the areola is open. The abdomen is nearly the same length as the carapace. The rostrum is long, centrally depressed, and has lateral margins converging into small but distinct spines. Chelae are broad, flattened, and long. The fingers are long with tubercles along the mesial margins of palm and dactyl. Tubercles also line the inner margin on the non-movable finger, and long setae are present at the base of the fingers. In form I males, gonopods terminate in two slender processes, and the mesial process curves the entire length of the gonopod. In females, the annulus ventralis is triangular with a median longitudinal fissure (Faxon, 1885).
Life coloration.
The background color is greenish brown to brown with cream stripes running along the bottom halves of the carapace. The abdomen has two rows of black blotches running longitudinally (
Figure 61
). Chelae have a bluish-green tint, with yellow to off-white tubercles along the inner margin of the palm and fingers. Fingers usually tipped with orange. Ventral side is white in color.
Similar species.
In Oklahoma,
O
.
nais
closely resembles
O
.
virilis
and
O
.
causeyi
.
Orconectes virilis
differs from
O
.
nais
in the shape of the gonopods of the form I males. In
O
.
nais
, the mesial process curves the entire length, while it only curves at the tip in
O
.
virilis
. See
O
.
causeyi
for differences between these two species.
Distribution and habitat.
Orconectes nais
occurs in the Great Plains of Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. It likely also occurs in the southwestern corner of Missouri and northwestern corner of Arkansas, but has not been reported to date. In Oklahoma,
O
.
nais
is found state wide, usually in larger rivers and streams with sand or silt as substrate. Additionally, we have excavated
O
.
nais
from burrows in roadside ditches that previously held standing water as it is a tertiary burrower. Our ecological niche model confirms the current distribution of
O
.
nais
, as much of the state is considered as having suitable environmental conditions (
Figure 62
).
Life history.
The majority of specimens of
O
.
nais
have been collected from April through October. Ovigerous females have been collected from October and April, and females ready to spawn were also collected in April, suggesting reproduction may occur multiple times a year (Armitage
et al.
, 1972).
Syntopic species.
Orconectes deanae
,
Orconectes neglectus neglectus
,
Orconectes virilis
, and
Procambarus acutus
.
Conservation status.
AFS: Currently Stable; Heritage Rank: Widespread (G5); IUCN: Least Concern; ODWC: Not Listed.
Additional resources.
Armitage & Topping (1962); Armitage & Wall (1982); Evans-White
et al.
(2001); Evans-White
et al.
(2003); Johnson (2010); Mathews
et al.
(2008); Pippitt (1977).