Scientific Name:

Metapenaeus stebbingi

Κοινό όνομα:
Peregrine shrimp
Ταξινομική Ομάδα:
Καρκινοειδή

Πληροφορίες

This shrimp reaches a maximum length of 11 cm in males and 14 cm in females. The smooth carapace is cream-coloured and speckled with rust-coloured spots. The antennae and margins of the tail fan are reddish. The rostrum has 7–10 teeth on the upper margin. The first and third pairs of walking legs have a basal spine. The longest segment of the fifth walking leg of males (the merus) bears a notch on the inner margin.

This species inhabits sandy or sandy-mud bottoms down to 90 m in depth. Juveniles occur in shallow coastal waters and adults usually further offshore, buried in the substrate in daytime and foraging at night.

Females attain sexual maturity at a relatively small size (5.5–6.0 cm in length). The highest percentage of mature females occurs between May and June, but the breeding season generally lasts from April to October.

The native Mediterranean Melicertus kerathurus can be distinguished from Metapenaeus stebbingi by the transverse dark bands on the first four segments of the abdomen and by the spines on its first and second pairs of walking legs.

Metapenaeus stebbingi Similar Species (0010) EL
Melicertus kerathurus
Metapenaeus stebbingi Similar Species (0020) EL
Melicertus kerathurus
Metapenaeus stebbingi Similar Species (0030) EL
Penaeus stebbingi

Native to the Indo-West Pacific, the peregrine shrimp was first recorded in the Mediterranean in Egypt in 1924. It has subsequently been recorded in Israel, Lebanon, southern Turkey, Syria and Tunisia.

Currently the impacts of this invasive shrimp on the native fauna in areas where it has been introduced are uncertain. The peregrine shrimp may have an advantage over the native Mediterranean prawn Melicertus kerathurus in competing for food resources, thereby affecting populations of this native species.

The peregrine shrimp is nowadays a commercially important species for fisheries in the Levant Sea. It is also a farmed species in ponds along the coast of Turkey.

No management options have yet been described.

Hamida-Ben Abdallah, O. et al., 2006. Premiere observation de la crevette faucon Metapenaeus stebbingi (nobili, 1904) dans le Golfe de gabes. Bull. Inst. Natn. Scien. Tech. Mer de Salammbô, Vol. 33, 133-136.

Bariche, M. 2012. Field identification guide to the living marine resources of the Eastern and Southern Mediterranean. FAO Species Identification Guide for Fishery Purposes. Rome, FAO. 610 pp.

Εικόνα
Metapenaeus stebbingi Illustration