Acclimation of Intertidal Crabs |
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Authors: | VERNBERG F. JOHN |
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Affiliation: | Duke University Marine Laboratory Beaufort, North Carolina 28516 |
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Abstract: | SVXOPSIS. Intertidal crabs are subjected to marked fluctuationsin environmental factors. Temperature and salinity influencethe distribution of organisms both on a latitudinal basis andalong a subtidal to terrestrial gradient. These factors areoperative on all stages of the life history. Resistance-adaptations. Adult fiddler crabs (genus Uca) fromthe temperate zone are more resistant to low temperature thantropical species. Also, the tolerance to low temperature ofcrabs from the temperate zone is greatly influenced by thermalacclimation, i.e. cold-acclimated crabs are more resistant thanwarm-acclimated animals. In contrast, tropical species havelimited adaptive ability. At elevated temperatures no consistentdifference in the lethal limits of crabs from tropical and temperatezones is observed. In contrast with the adults, larvae of tropicalspecies are cold-resistant. However, the larvae of all speciestested are more sensitive to reduced salinities than are theadults. Capacity-adaptatioyis. Subtidal species of crabs tend to havea lower level of respiratory performance, as measured by variousindices, than crabs from the intertidal zone. The metabolicresponse of fiddler crabs from the temperate zone is more labileat low temperature than in species from the tropical zone. Atelevated temperature the reverse response is observed. On aninterspecific basis, differences in the metabolictemperaturepatterns of acclimation of latitudinally separated populationsof U. pugilator are observed when based on the hypotheticalschemes of Bullock, Precht, and Prosser. |
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