Ohio Shrimp Missouri Department of Conservation
Freshwater shrimp are similar to crayfish but are easily distinguished from them. First, they are slender and nearly transparent. Shrimp have only the first 2 pairs of legs with pincers, whereas crayfish have pincers on the first 3 pairs of legs (the first pair being the crayfish's large “lobster” claws). Also, the abdomen (“tail”) of shrimp is flattened from side to side, while that of crayfish is flattened from top to bottom. Of Missouri’s two species of freshwater shrimp, the Ohio shrimp is very much less common. It is translucent pale grayish tan with blackish, brownish, or bluish speckles, and the rostrum (pointed, noselike structure atop the head) has 9–13 sawlike teeth along the top edge, is rounded outward, and has an upcurved, pointed tip. Similar species: The Mississippi grass shrimp, or glass shrimp (Palaemonetes kadiakensis), is very common. Its rostrum has 6–8 sawlike teeth along the top edge, which is not notably rounded in outline.
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