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    The scientific name of these animals is Euphausiacea. This comes from the Latin and Greek term euphausia, meaning light or illumination. The name was probably given because of their bioluminescent glow. They belong to the class of Malacostraca, which contains some 40,000 species of crustaceans.
    Euphausiids are shrimplike marine animals that are pelagic in habit ( i.e., they live in the open sea). They differ from true shrimp (order Decapoda) in that their gills are located on the swimming legs, and fewer legs are modified for feeding. They range in size from 8 to 60 mm (about 1/4 to 2 inches). Eighty-two species have been described.
    The euphausiid species, Thysanoessa inermis and T. raschii, have boreal-Arctic distributions, occurring in the North Atlantic, North Pacific, and Arctic Oceans.
    The euphausiid genus, Thysanoessa, includes ecologically significant and abundant species, most of which are key prey for predatory zooplankton and fish, providing essential trophic resources for pelagic ecosystems through the global ocean (Cabrol et al. 2019 ).
  2. Scientific echosounder data provide a predator’s view of Antarctic ...

  3. krill
    noun
    1. a small shrimplike planktonic crustacean of the open seas. It is eaten by a number of larger animals, notably the baleen whales.
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  4. Population genetic diversity and structure of the euphausiids

  5. The complete mitochondrial genome of the ice krill

  6. Understanding Krill: The Small but Mighty Sea Creature

  7. COL | World Euphausiacea Database

  8. Krill | Canada Commons