Macrobrachium lamarrei

Macrobrachium lamarrei commonly known as the Indian whisker shrimp, kuncho river prawn is a nocturnal species of freshwater shrimp found Biratnagar, Nepal.[1]

Macrobrachium lamarrei
Scientific classification
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M. lamarrei
Binomial name
Macrobrachium lamarrei
H. Milne Edwards, 1837

Description

M. lamarrei is creamy white to light brownish white with greenish brown pigmentation all over the cephalothorax. The males can reach a total length of 80 mm while the females are 75 mm long. This species has rostrum bears 7-9 teeth dorsally and 5-8 ventrally.[2]

Juvenile and adult prawns are omnivorous and feed on algae, planktonic organisms, small muscle pieces of their own kind or fish. Post larvae prawns feed on pure animal diet than on mixed diet of algae and nauplii.[2]

Behavior

Prawns of different sizes do not attack each other. When prawns die or become weak, others may attack and make them into their meal.[2]

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gollark: I'm not saying "change it", just that it is not perfect.
gollark: At least for high-level/application programming use.
gollark: As I have said, a language *should* make it hard to do unsafe/bad/insecure things.
gollark: No, the cons just make it bad for many uses.

References

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