Ranges Of Offshore Decapod Crustaceans In The Eastern Pacific Ocean
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Distributions of offshore decapods in the E Pacific fall into a pattern of at least 5 clusters: the Aleutian Islands to Washington, Washington or Oregon to southern California, Baja California and the Gulf of California to central America, Panama or Colombia to Peru, and Chile to Cape Horn. There is a sharp break in faunal distributions between that of N Baja California and all areas to the south, largely due to the replacement of species of Pandalus to the N by species of Heterocarpus. The NE Pacific is particularly rich in species of hippolytid shrimps and lithodid crabs and contains endemic genera of the families Crangonidae and Majidae. Species in these and other groups probably underwent extensive radiation in the late Cenozoic and dispersed from the N Pacific into the N Atlantic and less readily into the southern hemisphere. Compared to the northeastern Pacific, the W coast of South America is poor in the total number of species and the degree of endemism in decapods. Except for a few cosmopolitan species of the lower continental slopes, North and South America have no species in common. -from Author