“…One of the most important factors of the high diversity and eutrophication of the Bay is the presence of extensive nearby areas occupied by macrophytes (sea grasses and algae) that create favorable conditions for the development of multi-level communities, including both periphyton and bottom zoobenthos as well as a variety of bottom sediments including all types of bottom substratum: sand, clayey silt, silt, clayey-sandy mud with high detritus content, shell rock, marl, pebbles, rocks and rocks. Accordingly, the bottoms sites in this area are represented by various biotopes with psammophilic and pelophilic communities with domination of sponges, polychaetes Nephtys cirrus, mollusks Mytilus galloprovincialis, Cerastoderma glaucum and Hydrobia, areas with hard clay outlet with predominance of burrowing bivalves Barnea candida and others [Golovkina, Nabozhenko, 2012;Biryukova et al, 2016;Spiridonov et al, 2016;Zalota et al, 2017]. In contrast, bottom communities of the outer part of the Kazachiya Bay, where crabs where collected, are represented mainly by rocky boulders or artificial hard substrates, overgrowing with various macrophytes, clusters of mussels, other fouling organisms and underlying sandy bottom at a depth of more than 10-15 m. The bay is characterized by the presence of a large number of shelters for macrofauna and zoobenthos, and a low level of sedimentation in its outer part and significantly washed into tidal cycles and during strong storms, so there is not much accumulation of organic matter and eutrophication as in the Taman Bay [e.g.…”