That might be the male, but I'll take pictures and also a better look in the next day or two.
The female however, looks nothing like that. She looks more like a desert crawdad. A bit see through in parts, and tan/brown colors like a desert scorpion tends to be. She looks in color, exactly like my desert scorpion I had one year. Except, she is a crawdad of course.
They might be different species, but the male still mated with the female. Is that common for two different species of crawdad to mate? Or can one species have a large range of color? Do they create a hybrid if that happens? Because my male sure mated with my female.
I also saw an orange one (very bright!) that would have been I guess the Mexican Dwarf Crawdad, but sadly it was dead before I got there. The water they are in at the river, is getting more shallow and more and more warm. It probably didn't like that. When I was down there, it felt like a warm bathtub. Much warmer than Hawaii waters. There are three "ponds", the top one dries out and is where I get crawdads easiest. It is also the hottest and most shallow. The one in the middle has HUGE fish in it, and is very deep. Probably 5-6 feet deep (compared to the top one which doesn't even go to my knees, maybe a foot or two at most). The one on the bottom never dried out last year, but it sure looked a lot lower today.
Also, I saw something HUGE go into the bottom pond. It walked into the water, like a giant lizard would. Or it was a very monster-sized crawdad. I only saw it out of the corner of my eye, but I swore it was some kind of alligator. I never saw it again though. But it left a track in the sand into the water.
I did see one huge crawdad by the river, it was the size of a lobster I'd find out in the ocean. I have never seen one that big again, but it must have been really old. I guess crawdads can get pretty big.
Edited by Vendayn, June 29 2015 - 7:44 PM.