Research into the visual shape discrimination abilities of compound‐eyed animals has almost exclusively been limited to insects, the crustaceans having been virtually ignored. The two groups have many dissimilarities, having primarily adapted in different habitats to different lifestyles. Differences may exist in visual systems and visually mediated behavior.
Fiddler crabs (Uca pugilator), without training, differentially approached dissimilar silhouettes presented simultaneously, demonstrating visual discrimination between stationary, geometric shapes of equal‐area. The strength of response was ordered hierarchically: vertical rectangle, horizontal rectangle, triangle, square, circle.
Basic geometric shapes were used to facilitate replication and comparison with research findings from other species.
When animals receive stimuli associated with incompatible responses, they either show behaviour patterns relevant to just one input (hierarchical model) or show levels of responses intermediate in intensity (summation model). When animals have alternative responses to one category of input, the summation model can be followed.
Individuals of the porcellanid crab Petrolisthes elongates were exposed to food odours and then to alarm odours and the intensity of feeding behaviours recorded. With their chelipeds intact, crabs exposed to food and alarm odours showed intermediate levels of feeding. Following the induction of cheliped autotomy (thereby eliminating autotomy as an alternative response to predation risk), the crabs exposed to food and alarm odours showed a complete cessation of feeding responses. Thus elimination of an alternative response to elevated predation risk led to a switch from the summation model to the hierarchical model, as predicted. 相似文献
Metamorphosis of fiddler crab Ilyoplax pusilla larvaefrom megalopal to first crab stage wasstudied in laboratory experiments under variousconditions of salinity and substratum. The hatchedzoea metamorphose through five stages before reachingmegalopal stage. The megalops were placed in a 20 mlPetri dishes (2–3 megalops/dish), with salinities of10, 20 or 30 . Each salinity level was tested eitherwith or without sandy mud substratum. Thirty to 35megalops were used in each of the six treatments. Theexperiment was carried out at a water temperature of28 ±0.5°C and with daily feeding of the diatomChaetoceros gracilis. Treatment of 20 salinity andsandy mud substratum revealed the highest metamorphicrate (87%), while in contrast no metamorphosis wasobserved at 30 salinity withoutsandy mud substratum. Duration of the metamorphosiswas about 16 days. Numerous malformed juvenile crabswere observed in treatments conductedwithout sandy mud substratum. 相似文献
Male sand fiddler crabs, Uca pugilator, wave a claw to attract females to a breeding burrow. The effect of claw size on the likelihood of attracting mate-seeking females is little studied although in some other species females preferentially approach larger males. We used paired mirrors to reflect different sized images of the same male in a South Carolina (USA) back-beach habitat. Use of mirrors controlled for waving rate (but not velocity), waving motion, claw color, and claw shape. Female choice was attributed to instances in which a female contacted one of two mirrors. Paired mirrors were inclined toward one another in an arena defined by blinds and containing a single male. Two reflections of the male were visible to females moving approximately 50 cm toward the mirrors. The male was behind a small internal blind and not directly visible. In one-half of the trials, a non-magnifying mirror was placed at the bottom of mirrors so that only the elevated claw was magnified. Thus, body and burrow size and apparent distance were controlled. Receptive females preferred the larger reflection whether or not the body of the male was magnified, suggesting the importance of claw size. Non-receptive females did not exercise a choice. Control arenas, without a male, rarely attracted females. The results suggest that females choose on the basis of claw size. Selection on females may favor response to larger-clawed males because use of the claw in contests between males over burrows maintains the honesty of claw size as a signal of burrow quality. 相似文献
In the Calicut population of P. hydrodromous, eyestalk principles are either directly or indirectly involved in maintenance of the differential growth rate of the sexes during the latter half of the first year of the life cycle. The prebreeding season (September—November), which is distinct in crabs 4.0 cm and over in carapace width (cw), is either absent or not distinct in young females (cw 2.8–3.2 cm), though the latter enter their first reproductive cycle by December, when 8–9 mth old. December—March is a period of active vitellogenic growth; from March onwards, there is a distinct swing in favor of somatic growth in females, though the proecdysis per se is not initiated until May. A typical brachyuran, Paratelphusa restricts its reproductive activity to intermolt and somatic growth chiefly to premolt; there are, however, definite phases within the intermolt itself when the physiological tilt favors somatic growth or alternatively reproduction. In females above cw 4.0 cm, the tendency for somatic growth is suppressed once they attain this cw after the monsoon (June—July) molt; eyestalk ablation during the prebreeding season precipitates accelerated ovarian growth. Administration of β-ecdysone in premolt titers failed to restrain this ovarian response and to promote somatic growth sufficiently. Conceivably, gonadal growth-promoting principles keep under check the responsiveness of the target tissues involved in somatic growth perhaps by affecting ecdysone receptors. The present investigations do not indicate a vitellogenesis-inhibiting role for β-ecdysone. 相似文献
There is growing interest in the consequences of consistent individual behavioral differences within and between populations. We compared the magnitude, repeatability, and plasticity of boldness in the terrestrial hermit crab Coenobita compressus in three habitats with different degrees of disturbance in Costa Rica. We encourage researchers to test additional sites to assess the generality of our results. Boldness decreased with crab size at the less disturbed sites, while no relationship between size and boldness was found at the disturbed site. Boldness increased with habitat disturbance, perhaps because bolder crabs succeed in exploiting food around people. Repeatability and plasticity were similar across sites. We hypothesize that population differences may be the result of developmental plasticity when aquatic larvae settle on a beach or selection for boldness at the disturbed site acting on each new generation. 相似文献