BIOMETRY AND DEMOGRAPHY OF THE INVASIVE CRAYFISH ORCONECTES LIMOSUS IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC
Biometry, population data and selected ecological parameters of populations of
the spiny-cheek crayfish, Orconectes limosus, were measured to evaluate the differences
between “marginal” (short-time, situated on margins of an area) and “residential” (longterm,
well established inside an area) populations of this invasive crayfish. We selected
three types of localities: 1. Large rivers – residential (Labe, Vltava); 2. Brooks (small and
shallow running waters) – marginal; 3. Isolated standing waters – residential (old sandpits
or flooded quarries). No significant differences in the total body length of crayfish were
found between running and standing water localities as a whole, or between marginal
and residential populations from running waters. There was, however, a low but distinct
difference in the body weight between crayfish from brooks and other waters. Larger
specimens (up to 116.5 mm in body length) were found only in isolated standing waters,
whereas no crayfish longer than 100 mm were found in the rivers. The sex ratio of the
crayfish was almost equal in rivers and isolated waters; males were more numerous in
brooks. There was a significant difference between male and female body weight-length
relations.
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