About Demaorchestia alanensis:
- It is a new species of marine amphipod-a shrimp-like crustacea of the genus Demaorchestia.
- The present discovery has added one more species to the genus Demaorchestia, raising the global species number in the group to six.
- Features:
- It is white in colour and less than 15 millimetres in length.
- It has 13 pairs of legs. While three pairs are used for swimming in the water, eight pairs are used for walking on land. The other two pairs are used for capturing prey and feeding.
- The species can be distinguished from the other members of the genus by two to three strong, hair-like structures, or setae, on the anterior margin of the propodus of the gnathopod.
What are Amphipods?
- Amphipod are any member of the invertebrate order Amphipoda (class Crustacea) inhabiting all parts of the sea, lakes, rivers, sand beaches, caves, and moist (warm) habitats on many tropical islands.
- They are often mistaken for tiny shrimp, which they resemble.
- They can be found in all marine habitats (even the deepest ocean trenches, e.g., Hirondellea dubia), and have also colonised freshwater and terrestrial habitats.
- The generic diversity of amphipods is apparently higher in cool waters than in warm ones.
- Freshwater and marine beach species are commonly known as scuds; those that occupy sand beaches are called sand hoppers, or sand fleas (see sand flea).
- They range in size from a millimetre in length to the supergiant amphipod Alicella gigantea at 340 mm.
- They are important food for many fish, invertebrates, penguins, shore birds, small cetaceans, and pinnipeds.
- Most amphipods are active swimmers, propelled by three pairs of abdominal appendages.