“…Surveys of decapod fauna using the Aquatic Rapid Assessment Program (AquaRAP) protocol in some South American rivers resulted in four species of crabs (one Pseudothelphusidae and three Trichodactylidae) from the upper and middle Rio Caura, Venezuela (Magalhães & Pereira, 2003), five species (three Pseudothelphusidae, two Trichodactylidae) from the upper Rio Essequibo, Guiana (Lasso et al, 2008), five species (two Pseudothelphusidae, three Trichodactylidae) from the upper Rio Cuyuní, Venezuela , four species (one Pseudothelphusidae, three Trichodactylidae) from Rio Pastaza, Ecuador and Peru (Magalhães, 2005), four species (two Pseudothelphusidae, two Trichodactylidae) from upper Rio Paragua, Venezuela (Mora-Day & Blanco-Belmonte, 2008), 12 presumptive species (eight Pseudothelphusidae, four Trichodactylidae) from river drainages of the Tumucumaque Moutains National Park, Brazil (Vieira, 2008), three species (one Pseudothelphusidae, two Trichodactylidae) from the confluence of the Rio Orinoco and Rio Ventuari, Venezuela (Pereira & García, 2006), and three species (one Pseudothelphusidae, two Trichodactylidae) from the middle Coppename River, Suriname (Pereira & Berrestein, 2006). According to Magalhães & Pereira (2007), the Guayana Shield region, including parts of Colombia, Venezuela, Brazil, Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana, harbors representatives of 33 species of freshwater crabs: 21 species of Pseudothelphusidae and 12 species of Trichodactylidae. Similarly, Pereira et al (2009) compiled the list of the decapod species from the Rio Orinoco basin, which drains large areas of the Guayana Shield and the Venezuelan Llanos in northern South America, and reported 16 species of pseudothelphusid and five species of trichodactylid crabs for the whole region.…”