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Flight or fight: flexible antipredatory strategies in porcelain crabs
Authors:Wasson, Kerstin   Lyon, Bruce E.
Affiliation:a Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve, 1700 Elkhorn Road, Watsonville, CA 95076, USA, and b Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA
Abstract:Autotomy, the voluntary shedding of limbs or other body partsin the face of predation, is a highly effective escape mechanismthat has evolved independently in a variety of taxa. Crabs areunusual in that the limb that is typically sacrificed duringautotomy, the anterior clawed cheliped, can also be used toward off attack. During an encounter with a predator, an individualmust thus decide between two mutually exclusive strategies:flight or fight. We used experimental predation encounters withtwo species of porcelain crabs (genus Petrolisthes) to examinethe factors that influence the decision to flee versus fightand to determine the degree to which this decision is context-dependent.We found that autotomy was highly conditional. The characteristicsthat best predicted autotomy—smaller body size or femalegender—also correlated with a lower escape rate by thealternative escape tactic, struggling and pinching the predator.Variation among individuals in the benefit of autotomy (relativeto alternative tactics) appears to drive variation in propensityto autotomize. Porcelain crabs thus demonstrate adaptive flexibility,employing the costly strategy of autotomizing a limb as a lastresort, only when their chance at success by struggling is low.
Keywords:autotomy   body size   decapod crustacean   flexible defense strategy   Petrolisthes   predation.
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