Webster's 1913 Dictionary
ZOEA
Zo "ë *a, n. Etym: [NL. , fr. Gr. (Zoöl.)
Defn: A peculiar larval stage of certain decapod Crustacea, especially of crabs and certain Anomura. [Written also zoæa.]
Note: In this stage the anterior part of the body is relatively large, and usually bears three or four long spines. The years are conspicuous, and the antennæ and jaws are long, fringed organs used in swimming. The thoracic legs are undeveloped or rudimentary, the abdomen long, slender, and often without appendages. The zoëa, after casting its shell, changes to a megalops.
New American Oxford Dictionary
zoea
zo e a |zōˈēə ˈzoʊiə | ▶noun ( pl. zoeae |zōˈēˌē | or zoeas ) a larval form of certain crustaceans, such as the crab, having a spiny carapace and rudimentary limbs on the abdomen and thorax. ORIGIN early 19th cent.: modern Latin, from Greek zōē ‘life. ’
Oxford Dictionary
zoea
zo e a |zōˈēə ˈzoʊiə | ▶noun ( pl. zoeae |zōˈēˌē | or zoeas ) a larval form of certain crustaceans, such as the crab, having a spiny carapace and rudimentary limbs on the abdomen and thorax. ORIGIN early 19th cent.: modern Latin, from Greek zōē ‘life. ’