info:eu-repo/semantics/article
The crab Neohelice (=Chasmagnathus) granulata: An emergent animal model from emergent countries
Fecha
2010-05Registro en:
Spivak, Eduardo Daniel; The crab Neohelice (=Chasmagnathus) granulata: An emergent animal model from emergent countries; Springer; Helgoland Marine Research; 64; 3; 5-2010; 149-154
1438-387X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Spivak, Eduardo Daniel
Resumen
Neohelice granulata (previously known as Chasmagnathus granulata and C. granulatus) is a burrowing semiterrestrial crab found in the intertidal zone of estuaries, salt marshes and mangroves of the South-western Atlantic Ocean. Beginning in the late 1989s, an explosion of publications appeared in international journals dealing with its ecology, physiology, toxicology and behavior. A bibliometric analysis using the Scopus database allowed detecting 309 papers that deal with this species during the period 1986–2009. The number of papers per year increased continuously, reaching a mean annual value of 22.6 during the last 5 years; a great majority of them were authored by researchers from Argentina and Brazil. Neohelice granulata has become now one of the most studied crab species, after Carcinus maenas, Callinectes sapidus, Scylla serrata and Cancer pagurus and C. magister, and it can be considered as an emergent animal model for biochemical, physiological and ecological research.