Japanese crab

Japanese crab

Japanese crabs, also known as red armored crabs, sea red crabs, sand crabs, stone crabs, stone crabs, etc., are a species of crab in the family Crabs. It is distributed in Japan, Malaysia, the Red Sea, Taiwan Island and Chinese Mainland in Guangdong, Fujian, Zhejiang, Shandong Peninsula, Liaodong Peninsula and other places. This type of crab often inhabits low tide lines, underwater areas with aquatic plants or mud, and/or lurks under rocks. In scientific classification, it belongs to the animal kingdom, arthropod phylum, crustacean subphylum, soft shelled class, Decapoda, abdominal embryo subphylum, swimming crab family, and crab genus.
Procambarus clarkii

Procambarus clarkii

The Procambarus clarkii, also known as the red crayfish, freshwater crayfish, or red swamp crayfish, is a species of crayfish in the family Crayfidae. It is native to the southeastern United States and northern Mexico, and is now widely distributed in more than 40 countries and regions. It is also widely present in various parts of China, especially in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River where the population is the largest. This kind of shrimp often lives in rivers, lakes, ditches, ponds and rice fields. In scientific classification, it belongs to the animal kingdom, arthropod phylum, crustacean subphylum, soft shelled class, Decapoda, abdominal embryo subphylum, crayfish family, and genus Procambarus. The scientific name of this shrimp was first named by Girard in 1852.
Big mole cricket shrimp

Big mole cricket shrimp

The large mole shrimp is a species of animal belonging to the mole shrimp genus in the mole shrimp family. It is distributed in places such as the Korean Peninsula and the Shandong Peninsula in China. This type of shrimp often inhabits the muddy banks of freshwater rivers near the coast or in swamps near the shore. In scientific classification, it belongs to the animal kingdom, arthropod phylum, crustacean subphylum, softshell class, Decapoda, mole shrimp family, and mole shrimp genus. The scientific name of this shrimp was first named by De Haan in 1841.
Scylla olivacea

Scylla olivacea

The olive green crab is a species of animal in the family Crabaidae, belonging to the genus Crabapple. It is a commercially important crab species distributed in the Indo Western Pacific region, including Southeast Asia, South Asia, Japan, North Australia, as well as the East and South China Seas of China. Due to its fast growth, large size, and strong adaptability, its meat is delicious and has high nutritional value. It is a traditional precious seafood and artificial breeding object in Southeast Asia, South Asia, and Taiwan. Its claws are orange red in color, and its carapace is horizontally elliptical, with a width of up to 18 centimeters and pointed sides.
Red clawed mantis arm crab male

Red clawed mantis arm crab male

The red clawed mantis arm crab is an arthropod belonging to the family Characidae in the order Decapoda. The width of the head and chest armor is slightly larger than its length, square in shape, and has a smooth surface. Wide forehead, straight leading edge, sharp ridge behind forehead; The outer eye socket is triangular in shape; Sharp and toothless edges. Steps 1-4: The last 3 segments of the foot have black hard bristles; Abdominal triangle, tail segment nearly circular. Male claws are larger than females, with high palmar nodes and granular dorsal edges. The middle of the inner side has granules, while the outer side is smooth and often blood red in color; The gap between the two fingers of the male claw is larger than that of the female claw, and the inner edges of the two fingers are serrated, with one larger tooth at each end. The female abdomen is round and large.
Red clawed mantis arm crab female

Red clawed mantis arm crab female

The red clawed mantis arm crab is an arthropod belonging to the family Characidae in the order Decapoda. The width of the head and chest armor is slightly larger than its length, square in shape, and has a smooth surface. Wide forehead, straight leading edge, sharp ridge behind forehead; The outer eye socket is triangular in shape; Sharp and toothless edges. Steps 1-4: The last 3 segments of the foot have black hard bristles; Abdominal triangle, tail segment nearly circular. Male claws are larger than females, with high palmar nodes and granular dorsal edges. The middle of the inner side has granules, while the outer side is smooth and often blood red in color; The gap between the two fingers of the male claw is larger than that of the female claw, and the inner edges of the two fingers are serrated, with one larger tooth at each end. The female abdomen is round and large.
Medium sized round square crab

Medium sized round square crab

Medium sized round square crab is a species of crab in the family Crabaidae and genus Crabapple. It is distributed in North Korea, the Indian Ocean, and Taiwan Island. This type of crab often inhabits under rocks or between pebbles at the high tide line, and its living environment is seawater. In scientific classification, it belongs to the animal kingdom, arthropod phylum, crustacean subphylum, soft shelled class, Decapoda, Caesarea, short tailed suborder, Crabapple family, and Crabapple genus. The scientific name of this crab was first named by Ortmann in 1894.
Tree frog

Tree frog

Tree frogs are members of the family Ranidae in the order Anura of the phylum Chordata. Tree frogs have a medium or large body, with male frogs generally having a pointed snout and female frogs having a high and blunt snout; The posterior end of the tongue is deeply incised, the pear bone teeth are well-developed, the eardrum is obvious, there are webbed or webbed spaces between the fingers, the toes are almost fully webbed, and the lateral plantar is more developed; The nasal bone is small, the butterfly sieve bone is exposed, the forehead is wide or short, and the head skin is not tightly attached to the skull; The hyoid bone has no anterior protrusion of the lingual horn and a wing like protrusion.
Gekko japonicus

Gekko japonicus

Multi wart geckos are a species belonging to the phylum Chordata, class Reptiles, order Scales, family Gecko, and genus Gecko. The body shape of the gecko with multiple warts is medium, with a flat head and a body length of 52-57 millimeters, and a tail length of 54-57 millimeters. The head is medium-sized and oval in shape. The kiss is slanted and flat, except for slightly larger scales on the snout, the rest are granular scales, and the middle of the forehead is slightly concave. The ear hole is small and oval in shape. The eardrum is deeply sunken, the nose is located at the snout end, and there are fine teeth on the upper and lower jaws. The tongue is broad, concave at the top, and sticky. One pair of chin scales, pentagonal.
Viper

Viper

The pit viper is a reptile belonging to the family Viperidae in the order Serpentes. The body length of the pit viper is 60-70 centimeters, and its head is slightly triangular; The back is gray brown to brown, with a dark "∧" - shaped spot on the head and back, and the belly is gray white to gray brown with black spots. The pit viper, when touched, will flip over, and when bitten, people will also flip over, hence its name. The pit viper is distributed in China except for Guangdong, Hainan, and Guangxi. It often inhabits plains, hills, low mountainous areas, fields, streams, and ditches with scattered rocks or grass, and bends into a disc or wave shape. The reproduction, feeding, and activity of pit vipers are all constrained by temperature.
The Island Brown Frog

The Island Brown Frog

The Tsushima Island brown frog, also known as the Tsushima Island leopard frog, is a species belonging to the amphibian class, order Anura, family Ranidae, and genus Ranidae. This species was initially described as a new species by Stejneger in 1907 based on a male specimen (USNM 17519) from Mikayama, Kamida cho, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan. The altitude of the collection site for this specimen is 160 meters.
Ueno Brown Frog

Ueno Brown Frog

The Ueno brown frog Rana Uenoi is a species of amphibian belonging to the family Ranidae in the order Anura. This type of frog is called the Ueno Brown Frog. It is related to two other brown frogs in South Korea (R. huanreinsis and R. coreana), and researchers used species distribution modeling techniques to predict the distribution range of these frogs under future climate change based on observation points and environmental variables.
Female Field Frog

Female Field Frog

The Tianhou frog is a species of frog belonging to the family Ranidae. This species of frog is endemic to Japan and is widely distributed in Honshu, Shikoku, Kyushu, and some surrounding small islands. This type of frog mainly lives near streams in mountainous areas and forests. During the breeding season from April to May, they lay eggs in the rock crevices or soil at the water inflow points in streams. Their tadpoles can complete metamorphosis and begin terrestrial life without the need for food. During the non breeding season, they can be seen in the fallen leaves on the forest floor next to the stream.
Male Field Frog

Male Field Frog

The Tianhou frog is a species of frog belonging to the family Ranidae. This species of frog is endemic to Japan and is widely distributed in Honshu, Shikoku, Kyushu, and some surrounding small islands. This type of frog mainly lives near streams in mountainous areas and forests. During the breeding season from April to May, they lay eggs in the rock crevices or soil at the water inflow points in streams. Their tadpoles can complete metamorphosis and begin terrestrial life without the need for food. During the non breeding season, they can be seen in the fallen leaves on the forest floor next to the stream.
Ozawa Crab

Ozawa Crab

Ozawa crab is a freshwater crab belonging to the genus Ozawa. It coexists with Geothelphusa dehaani in river habitats in southern Kyushu, Kagoshima Prefecture, and the Osumi Peninsula in Japan. With G Compared to Dehaani, the maximum body size of the Ozawa crab is smaller and it mainly lives in water (aquatic), while G Dehaani may live both in water and on land (amphibious). The differences in habitat and activity patterns among Geothelphusa species are attributed to their microenvironment and the impact of interspecific competition in symbiosis.
Sesarma bidens

Sesarma bidens

The Sesarma bidens, also known as the Double Toothed Hand Crab, belongs to the family Crabs and the genus Sesarma. The two tooth hand crab is distributed in North Korea, Japan, the Philippines, the Malay Islands, Andaman, Sri Lanka, India, Taiwan Island, as well as Guangxi, Guangdong, Hong Kong, Fujian and other places in the Chinese Mainland. Its living environment is seawater, which is mostly found on mudflats near estuaries and far away from water.
Metopograpsus quadridentatus

Metopograpsus quadridentatus

The Four Toothed Large Crab (scientific name: Metopograpsus quadridentatus) is an animal belonging to the genus Large Crab in the family Crabs. It is distributed in Malacca, Java, Balibaban, Kalimantan, New Guinea, the Indian Ocean, and Guangdong, Fujian, Zhejiang, Shandong and other places in Chinese Mainland. Its living environment is sea water, which is mostly found in rock cracks or under rocks at the low tide line.
Chasmagnathus convexus

Chasmagnathus convexus

Chasmaganathus converxus, also known as the long backed open mouth crab, belongs to the family of square crabs. Some individuals have a bright purple color all over their body and red joints, which are easily recognizable, but some individuals have a yellowish color that is very similar to Taiwan thick crabs. Cave dwellings are found around grassy marshes near river mouths, between field ridges, mangrove swamps, and along earthen embankments. There are collection records in both the Jianxing ephedra forest and the Wenliao mangrove forest.
Dehani Sawa Crab

Dehani Sawa Crab

The Geothelphusa dehaani crab (scientific name: Geothelphusa dehaani) is a type of crab classified in the order Shrimp (Decapoda), suborder Crabs, and family Characidae. It is a unique species in Japan, a pure freshwater crab that spends its entire life in freshwater areas. The specific name dehaani in the scientific name is named in honor of the Dutch zoologist Wilhelm de Haan, who made contributions to the classification of crustaceans in Japan.
Chiromantes dehaani

Chiromantes dehaani

Chiromantes dehaani, formerly known as Chiromantes dehaani, originally belonged to the family Characidae and genus Chiromantes. After separating from the family Characidae, Chiromantes dehaani was reclassified as Chiromantes and genus Chiromantes dehaani. It is distributed in Korea, Japan, Taiwan Island, Hainan Island, Guangdong, Fujian, Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Liaodong Peninsula and other places in Chinese Mainland, and generally lives on the muddy banks of offshore freshwater rivers or in offshore marshes. It is the second intermediate host of mouse lung flukes.
Sea squirt shrimp

Sea squirt shrimp

Thalassina anomala (scientific name: Thalassina anomala) is an animal belonging to the family Thalassidae in the order Decapoda of the phylum Arthropoda in the animal kingdom. The head and chest armor of the sea squirt shrimp genus is slightly flattened and swollen on the side, slightly elliptical in shape, calcified and thick, with two longitudinal sutures (sea squirt shrimp sutures), small frontal horns, and pointed spines. Abdominal degeneration, slender and flat, without obvious lateral armor. The first and second steps are characterized by sub chelation of the feet, with the first pair being thick and asymmetrical, with the knuckles greatly extending beyond the end of the immobile fingers.
Anthropomorphic face crab

Anthropomorphic face crab

The anthropomorphic crab is a species of crab in the anthropomorphic crab family, also known as the carrier crab. It occurs in the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean, from Angola to Norway, the Northern Islands, and Iceland. It is benthic and occurs at depths of 10-1212 meters, but is mainly found at depths exceeding 80 meters. It prefers areas with soil and emerging rocks, and has been observed in deep-water coral gardens and sponge gathering areas.
Red eyed Snow Crab

Red eyed Snow Crab

Red eyed snow crab, also known as Bai's snow crab or long footed crab, is a type of snow crab. It is very similar to the gray eyed snow crab and is both found in the Bering Sea. The difference is that it is only found in the northern Pacific Ocean and is commonly referred to as the "snow crab" when sold. In the United States, it is also known as the cobbler crab, and in Japan, it is also known as the Great Chu crab or the big headed dwarf crab. Due to overfishing, the population of red eyed snow crabs has significantly decreased.
Platycodon grandiflorus crab

Platycodon grandiflorus crab

Platycodon grandiflorus, commonly known as orange mud crab, is a species of important commercial value in the mangrove crab genus. It is one of several crabs known as mud crabs, distributed in mangrove areas from Southeast Asia to Pakistan, from Japan to northern Australia. Like other species in the Scylla genus, it is widely cultivated using wild caught populations in aquaculture.
sesarma haematocheir

sesarma haematocheir

The red clawed hand crab is an arthropod belonging to the family Tetraodontidae in the order Decapoda. The width of the head and chest armor is slightly larger than its length, square in shape, and has a smooth surface. Wide forehead, straight leading edge, sharp ridge behind forehead; The outer eye socket is triangular in shape; Sharp and toothless edges. Steps 1-4: The last 3 segments of the foot have black hard bristles; Abdominal triangle, tail segment nearly circular. Male claws are larger than females, with high palmar nodes and granular dorsal edges. The middle of the inner side has granules, while the outer side is smooth and often blood red in color; The gap between the two fingers of the male claw is larger than that of the female claw, and the inner edges of the two fingers are serrated, with one larger tooth at each end. The female abdomen is round and large.
Female Flying Frog

Female Flying Frog

The flying frog is a species of amphibian belonging to the Rhacophoridae family. This kind of frog breeds in a special way. They make foam nests underground. They will crawl on the edges of rice paddies and swamps, and dig caves above the water surface. The female carries the smaller male on her back, and both are buried in a hole that is 6-9 centimeters wide and 10-15 centimeters above the water surface. The interior of this nest is smoothed out through female movement, and then at night, it is filled with white material filled with air bubbles.
Flying Frog Male

Flying Frog Male

The flying frog is a species of amphibian belonging to the Rhacophoridae family. This kind of frog breeds in a special way. They make foam nests underground. They will crawl on the edges of rice paddies and swamps, and dig caves above the water surface. The female carries the smaller male on her back, and both are buried in a hole that is 6-9 centimeters wide and 10-15 centimeters above the water surface. The interior of this nest is smoothed out through female movement, and then at night, it is filled with white material filled with air bubbles.
Zelu Frog Female

Zelu Frog Female

The Zelu frog (scientific name: Fejervarya Multistriata) is a species of amphibian in the family Ranidae, belonging to the genus Ranunculus. The head length is slightly larger than the head width, the snout end is blunt and pointed, the pupils are horizontally elliptical, and the distance between the eyes is very narrow, which is 1/2 of the upper eyelid; The eardrum is circular. The skin on the back is rough, without dorsal folds, and there are several rows of longitudinal folds of varying lengths on the back of the body. There are small warts between the folds, on the side of the body, and on the back of the hind limbs; The skin on the body and abdomen is smooth.
Zelu Frog Male

Zelu Frog Male

The Zelu frog (scientific name: Fejervarya Multistriata) is a species of amphibian in the family Ranidae, belonging to the genus Ranunculus. The head length is slightly larger than the head width, the snout end is blunt and pointed, the pupils are horizontally elliptical, and the distance between the eyes is very narrow, which is 1/2 of the upper eyelid; The eardrum is circular. The skin on the back is rough, without dorsal folds, and there are several rows of longitudinal folds of varying lengths on the back of the body. There are small warts between the folds, on the side of the body, and on the back of the hind limbs; The skin on the body and abdomen is smooth.
Forest Frog

Forest Frog

The forest frog is a species of amphibian in the family Ranidae of the order Anura, commonly known as the toad, husky horse, snow clam, etc. Flat head, slender limbs; The eardrum is round, with triangular black brown spots on the eardrum; The back of the body is mostly earthy yellow, with dark spots scattered on the warts; The dorsal fold curves diagonally outward above the eardrum.
Male Mountain Red Frog

Male Mountain Red Frog

The mountain red frog is a species of frog in the Ranidae family. The body length of the mountain red frog can reach approximately 4.2-7.8 centimeters. Females are slightly larger than males. The body color on the back is brown, reddish brown, or dark brown, while the belly is light yellow.
Female Mountain Red Frog

Female Mountain Red Frog

The mountain red frog is a species of frog in the Ranidae family. The body length of the mountain red frog can reach approximately 4.2-7.8 centimeters. Females are slightly larger than males. The body color on the back is brown, reddish brown, or dark brown, while the belly is light yellow.
Bi Feng Butterfly

Bi Feng Butterfly

The Bi Feng butterfly is an animal belonging to the family Papilionidae in the order Lepidoptera. The wings are triangular, the outer edge of the hind wings is wavy, and the body wings are black; The upper half of the forewings is pale in color, with scattered golden yellow, golden blue, or golden green scales between the wing veins,; There are 6 pink or blue bird shaped spots on the outer edge of the hind wing, and a semi-circular pink spot on the buttock corner; A large blue area is formed in the mid wing region, especially near the leading edge, with a pale color on the reverse side and very distinct markings; The middle chambers of the front and rear wings are closed, and the tail process is also covered with blue and green shiny scales, but only black scales are present at the edges to form a black frame; The color and markings of male and female butterflies are almost the same, and the orange red crescent pattern on the outer edge of the hind wings of female butterflies is slightly more developed than that of male butterflies.
Forest Green Tree Frog

Forest Green Tree Frog

The forest green tree frog is a species of amphibian belonging to the Rhacophoridae family. This kind of frog breeds in a special way. They make foam nests underground. They will crawl on the edges of rice paddies and swamps, and dig caves above the water surface.
Gekko hokouensis

Gekko hokouensis

Lead mountain geckos are reptiles. The physiological characteristics are similar to lizards, but with one difference, there is nothing between the two ears. We can see inside from one ear of the gecko and directly see outside through the other ear. The central nervous system of geckos is located in the spinal cord. It generally inhabits gaps and holes in buildings, as well as under bricks and grass in the wild. The model habitats of this species distributed in Japan, Taiwan Island and Chinese Mainland, such as Anhui, Jiangsu, Shanghai, Dajinshan Island, Zhejiang, Fujian, Jiangxi and Hunan, are northeast Jiangxi, estuaries and salt mountains.