Resource partitioning and adequacy among ontogenetic groups in a hermit crab and gastropod shell network

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mateus Pereira Santos ◽  
Gabriel Fellipe Barros Rodrigues ◽  
Maria Lucia Negreiros-Fransozo ◽  
Vivian Fransozo
Author(s):  
Guillermina Alcaraz ◽  
Karla Kruesi

The gastropod shell influences important aspects of the hermit crab's life; however, the shells are commonly a limited resource. Therefore, different hermit crab species that coexist in intertidal areas are commonly involved in intraspecific and interspecific competition for shells. We assess if differences in shell preference, exploitation ability, or competition by interference can explain the partitioning of shells between the coexisting species Calcinus californiensis and Clibanarius albidigitus. Clibanarius preferred shells of Nerita funiculata among the six gastropod shells tested, while Calcinus did not establish a hierarchy in shell preference. Therefore, the preference for gastropod shell species does not seem to diminish the competition for shells in the wild. Clibanarius identified and attended to chemical cues signalling potential sites of available shells (chemical cues of dead gastropods); Calcinus did not respond to these cues (competition by exploitation). However, Calcinus was more successful in obtaining a new shell by interspecific shell fighting than Clibanarius. Consequently, the use of better quality shells (intact shells) by Calcinus in the wild can be explained by its greater fighting ability compared with Clibanarius. The bias in shell distributions through dominance by shell fighting, more than by exploitation ability, has also been suggested for other hermit crab species of these genera.


2016 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-31
Author(s):  
Kogiku MORI ◽  
Tomoya MIURA ◽  
Tatsuya FUKUDA ◽  
Osamu MIURA

Author(s):  
Hiromi Hasegawa ◽  
Satoshi Wada ◽  
Masakazu Aoki ◽  
Keiji Wada

The preference for two shell species, Monodonta labio form confusa and Thais clavigera, was compared between two populations of the hermit crab Pagurus filholi from Oura Bay, Shimoda, central Japan and from Hakodate Bay, Hakodate, northern Japan. Hermit crabs from Oura Bay preferred T. clavigera to M. labio form confusa, whereas crabs from Hakodate Bay preferred M. labio form confusa. The shell of T. clavigera was more effective against desiccation and high temperature stress but heavier than M. labio form confusa. The preference of P. filholi from Oura Bay for T. clavigera may be attributable to the greater requirement for protection against higher physical stresses, even though a higher energetic cost related to the shell weight is incurred.


Author(s):  
J. B. Gilpin-Brown

The adults ofNereis fucata (Savigny) are commensal with hermit crabs and live within the upper whorls of the shells of their hosts. The mechanism of host adoption has been examined in juveniles reared in the laboratory. There are two distinct phases in their response to their host. The first is a searching phase during which the anterior two-thirds of the worm is extended from the tube and makes wide sweeping movements in its immediate vicinity. This phase can be initiated in the laboratory solely by vibrations in the substrate; the presence of a hermit crab is not required. The second phase begins as soon as a suitable gastropod shell is touched, when the worm immediately leaves its tube and enters the shell. In the laboratory this phase can be achieved without the presence of a hermit crab, so that it is presumably primarily dependent upon the tactile stimuli received from the surface of the shell. It is argued that in nature only hermit-crab shells would commonly give this combination of stimuli to the worm and that the association betweenNereis fucata and hermit crabs is not accidental but commensal.


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