Reef lobster


Reef lobsters, Enoplometopus, are a genus of small lobsters that live on reefs in the Indo-Pacific, Caribbean and warmer parts of the Atlantic Ocean.

Description

Species of Enoplometopus occur from coral reefs at depths of less than to rocky reefs at depths of. They are brightly coloured, with stripes, rings, or spots. They are typically mainly red, orange, purplish and white. Reef lobsters are small, nocturnal, and very timid. The species can be distinguished by their colouration and morphology.

As a result of their bright colours, they are popular in the aquarium trade, and unregulated collection combined with destruction of coral reefs may threaten some species. Due to uncertainty over the impact of these potential threats, the majority are considered data deficient by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
Reef lobsters are distinguished from clawed lobsters by having full chelae only on the first pair of pereiopods, the second and third pairs being only subchelate. Clawed lobsters have full claws on the first three pereiopods. Males, unlike those of nephropoid lobsters, have an extra lobe on the second pleopod, which is assumed to have some function in reproduction. Reef lobsters have a shallow cervical groove while clawed lobsters have a deep cervical groove.
Although there is no fossil record of reef lobsters, there is some evidence that they may be related to the extinct genus
Eryma'' which lived from the Permo-Triassic to the late Cretaceous.

Species

The genus contains the following species: