Amphipod

Amphipoda
Temporal range: Eocene to Recent
Gammarus roeseli
Scientific classification
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Amphipoda

Latreille 1816
Suborders
  • Gammaridea
  • Caprellidea or Corophiidea
  • Hyperiidea
  • Ingolfiellidea

The Amphipods are an order of malacostracan crustaceans. They have no carapace.

The name amphipoda means "different-footed". Unlike isopods, where all the legs are alike, amphipods have different appendage types.

Of the 7,000 species, 5,500 are classified into one suborder, the Gammaridea. The rest are in two or three other suborders.

Amphipods range in size from 0.1 to 34 centimetres (0.04 to 13 inches) and are mostly detritivores or scavengers. They live in almost all aquatic environments; 750 species live in caves and the order also includes terrestrial animals and sandhoppers such as Talitrus saltator. The largest amphipods live on the sea floor, seven kilometres down.[1]

  1. Morelle, Rebecca 2012. 'Supergiant' crustacean found in deepest ocean BBC Science and environment.

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