''Ligia'' is a genus of
isopod
Isopoda is an order of crustaceans that includes woodlice and their relatives. Isopods live in the sea, in fresh water, or on land. All have rigid, segmented exoskeletons, two pairs of antennae, seven pairs of jointed limbs on the thorax, an ...
s, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in
tidal zone cliffs and
rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecology
Coastal ''Ligia'' species exhibit a mixture of terrestrial and marine characteristics, drying out easily, needing moist air and proximity to water to retain water. While they have gills and can exchange gas under water, they only do so when escaping terrestrial
predator
Predation is a biological interaction where one organism, the predator, kills and eats another organism, its prey. It is one of a family of common feeding behaviours that includes parasitism and micropredation (which usually do not kill ...
s or being dislodged by
wave action
In fluid dynamics, a wind wave, water wave, or wind-generated water wave, is a surface wave that occurs on the free surface of bodies of water as a result from the wind blowing over the water surface. The contact distance in the direction ...
. They do not move swiftly in the water and are open to marine predation. They are well adapted to rocky surfaces and avoid sand, which opens them to terrestrial predation and
desiccation
Desiccation () is the state of extreme dryness, or the process of extreme drying. A desiccant is a hygroscopic (attracts and holds water) substance that induces or sustains such a state in its local vicinity in a moderately sealed container. ...
.
Taxonomy
It has been suggested that ''Ligia'' is more closely to marine isopods than it is to true
woodlice
A woodlouse (plural woodlice) is an isopod crustacean from the polyphyleticThe current consensus is that Oniscidea is actually triphyletic suborder Oniscidea within the order Isopoda. They get their name from often being found in old wood.
...
.
Species
Species separation is at times difficult because of sexual dimorphism. For example, males usually have longer and wider antennae than females. The males also tend to be larger but narrower, with the difference sometimes attributed to the female’s brood pouch. Complicating matters is the possible existence of cryptic species in the genus.
This is a list of all ''Ligia'' species contained in ''A Bibliography of Terrestrial Isopods'':
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Ligia australiensis'' – Australian slater, Australia, including Tasmania and Lord Howe Island
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Ligia baudiniana
''Ligia baudiniana'' is a woodlouse in the family Ligiidae. It has a coarsely granular surface and large eyes that are very close together.
Distribution
''L. baudiniana'' has been found from Bermuda to the Yucatán Peninsula and south to P ...
'' – east and west coasts of the Americas
*''
Ligia boninensis
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolo ...
'' – Bonin Islands, Japan
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Ligia cajennensis'' – French Guiana
*''
Ligia cinerascens'' – Hokkaido and northern Honshu, Japan, and the Kuril Islands
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Ligia cursor
''Ligia cursor'' is a woodlouse in the family Ligiidae.
The antennae are as long as the cephalothorax, which is the head and body of the animal. Its flagellum contains 21 segments, 14 larger and 7 smaller, and each joint shows setae (small brist ...
'' – Chile
*''
Ligia curvata
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolo ...
'' – Angola
*''Ligia dante –'' Hawai'i Island (Hawaii)
*''
Ligia dentipes
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolo ...
'' – Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Indonesia
*''
Ligia dilatata
''Ligia dilatata'' is a woodlouse in the family Ligiidae.
Identification
It has a finely granular surface and a body that is slightly convex, as well as eyes that are large and convex. It has relatively small uropods.
It can be differentiated ...
'' – southern Africa (Namibia and South Africa)
*''Ligia eleluensis'' – Maui, Hawaii
*''
Ligia exotica
''Ligia exotica'', also called sea roach or wharf roach, is a woodlouse-like isopod, a sea slater in the family Ligiidae. It is found in various parts of the world living on rocky coasts and harbour walls just above high water mark.
Descrip ...
'' – wharf roach, introduced around the world in subtropical and warm temperate coastlines
*''
Ligia ferrarai
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolo ...
'' – Madagascar
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Ligia filicornis
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolo ...
'' – Venezuela
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Ligia glabrata
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolo ...
'' – Southern Africa (Namibia and South Africa)
*''
Ligia gracilipes
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolo ...
'' – west coast of Africa, Senegal to northern Angola
*''
Ligia hachijoensis
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolo ...
'' – Izu Islands, Japan
*''
Ligia hawaiensis'' – Kaua'i, Hawaii
*''Ligia honu'' – Hawaii Island, Hawaii
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Ligia italica'' – coasts of the Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea, Atlantic in northern Africa downsouth to Cape Verde and Macaronesia Islands
*''Ligia kamehameha'' – Hawaii Island, Hawaii
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Ligia latissima'' – New Caledonia
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Ligia litigiosa'' – Chile and Peru and the Juan Fernández Islands
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Ligia malleata
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolog ...
'' – Tanzania
*''Ligia mauinuiensis'' – Maui Nui Islands and Oahu, Hawaii
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Ligia miyakensis'' – Izu Islands, Japan
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Ligia natalensis'' – southeastern coast of South Africa from Knysna to Natal
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Ligia novaezealandiae
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolog ...
'' – New Zealand and Kermadec Island
*''
Ligia occidentalis
''Ligia occidentalis'' is a species of rock slater in the family Ligiidae. L. occidentalis is a habitat generalist of rocky shores. It is found in North America and Mexico. The western sea slater (sometimes called the rock louse) is separated fr ...
'' – California and Baja California
*''
Ligia oceanica
''Ligia oceanica'', the sea slater, common sea slater, or sea roach, is a littoral zone woodlouse, living on rocky seashores of the European North Sea and Atlantic coastlines.
''L. oceanica'' is oval, twice as long as broad, and may reach up to ...
'' – Atlantic Coasts of Europe, coasts of western Baltic Sea and possibly introduced to the Atlantic Coast of North America
*''
Ligia pallasii
''Ligia pallasii'', the rock louse, is a species of rock slater in the family Ligiidae
Ligiidae is a family (biology), family of woodlouse, woodlice, the only family in the infraorder Diplocheta. Its members are common on rocky shores, in sim ...
'' – Pacific Coast of North America, the Aleutian Islands to Santa Cruz, California
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Ligia pallida'' – Christmas Island in Polynesia
*''Ligia pele'' – Maui, Hawai'i
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Ligia perkinsi'' – Kaua'i and O'ahu, Hawaiian Islands
*''Ligia persica'' – Persian Gulf
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Ligia philoscoides'' – southeastern Polynesia
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Ligia pigmentata
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolog ...
'' – Red Sea, Persian Gulf and coast of Somalia
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Ligia platycephala
''Ligia platycephala'' is a species of isopod from the genus ''Ligia''.
Description
When seen from above, ''L. platycephala'' resembles Ligia exotica, ''L. exotica'', in the soft, weakly articulated body and the posteriorly narrowing outline at ...
'' – Venezuela, Guyana and Trinidad
*''Ligia rolliensis'' – Oahu, Hawai'i
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Ligia rugosa'' – southeastern Polynesia
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Ligia ryukyuensis'' – Japan
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Ligia saipanensi
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolog ...
'' – Saipan Island, Micronesia
*''
Ligia simoni'' – Northern Venezuela and northern Colombia
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Ligia taiwanensis
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolog ...
'' – Taiwan
*''
Ligia vitiensis
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolog ...
'' – Sulawesi, Singapore, New Guinea, Melanesia, Polynesia, and possibly introduced to Somalia
*''
Ligia yamanishii
''Ligia'' is a genus of isopods, commonly known as rock lice or sea slaters. Most ''Ligia'' species live in tidal zone cliffs and rocky beaches, but there are several fully terrestrial species which occur in high-humidity environments.
Ecolo ...
'' – Tokyo
*''Ligia yemenica'' – Gulf of Aden
References
External links
*
{{Taxonbar, from=Q148814
Woodlice
Isopod genera
Taxa named by Johan Christian Fabricius