Annual breeding seasons of three sympatric species of tropical intertidal hermit crabs, with a discussion of factors controlling breeding

1968 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 308-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ernst S. Reese
Author(s):  
Alexander Turra ◽  
Fosca P.P. Leite

Hermit crab populations have been described in different habitats and latitudes but few studies focused on coexisting populations. Such information is especially important to evaluate the effect of coexistence in the population biology of such organisms. This study was done in the intertidal region of Pernambuco Islet, São Sebastião Channel, south-eastern Brazil. Random samples of crabs were taken monthly during one year to evaluate their size and sex. The three coexisting Clibanarius populations (C. antillensis, C. sclopetarius, and C. vittatus) showed similar patterns of sex ratio (skewed for females), sexual dimorphism (males larger than females), recruitment (February to June) and population growth but differed in size structure (Cs>Cv>Ca) and reproductive activity over the year. Population growth was estimated using the von Bertalanffy growth function (VBGF) and revealed that the growth of these three populations was strongly reduced from August to January and that longevity varied from 42 to 48 months. Clibanarius antillensis showed continuous reproduction with high frequency of ovigerous females over the year while C. sclopetarius and C. vittatus had a reproductive peak in April and absence of ovigerous females in August/September. Coexistence seemed to influence population biology of these hermit crabs, given the relationship of their reproductive periods and growth patterns to the shell adequacy to the crabs. The overlap in reproductive peaks and recruitment periods may strengthen competition for shells. Comparisons of the reproductive patterns of the hermit crab populations recorded to date emphasize that reproduction and, consequently, life strategies of hermit crabs are not directly dependent on taxonomic or geographical proximity, but on their evolutionary histories and on local processes acting on each assemblage or population.


Zootaxa ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 872 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
BRENT E. HENDRIXSON ◽  
Jason E. Bond

Two sympatric species of Antrodiaetus (Araneae, Mygalomorphae, Antrodiaetidae) are recorded from southwestern North Carolina: A. unicolor (Hentz 1841) and A. microunicolor new species. A neotype for A. unicolor is designated from DeSoto State Park in Alabama and a description is provided. A new species of Antrodiaetus is described from the Coweeta Long Term Ecological Research station in southwestern North Carolina. This new species is sympatric (putatively syntopic) with the closely related A. unicolor and can be differentiated from that species on the basis of size, setal characters, coloration, selected morphometric ratios, and non-overlapping breeding seasons. A brief account on the natural history for both species at Coweeta is presented.


Zoosymposia ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 212-228
Author(s):  
AKIRA YAMANAKA ◽  
YUKI TAKUWA ◽  
CHISATO KITAZAWA

Three sympatric species of temnopleurid sea urchins, Temopleurus toreumaticus (Leske, 1778), T. hardwickii (Gray, 1855) and Mespilia globulus (Linnaeus, 1758), occupy a habitat located a short distance from the shore of the Seto Inland Sea, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan. Breeding seasons overlap considerably among these species. These species exhibit species-specific differences in embryonic and larval development such as a wrinkled zygote, wrinkled blastula, archenteron invagination, larval skeleton and juvenile morphology. In this study, we determined whether interbreeding among these species is possible. Investigations revealed that fertilization succeeded with all mating combination patterns and that all fertilized eggs developed to the gastrula stage. The blastula and gastrula of hybrids formed in a manner similar to the maternal whereas the developmental delay observed followed the pattern of the paternal species T. toreumaticus fertilized at a greater proportion than other pairs and metamorphosed. These results suggest that eggs of this species may have weaker fertilization block in general. At the early developmental stages, hybrid embryos from T. toreumaticus mothers express maternal, while some hybrids derived from sperm of T. toreumaticus and the eggs of other species ceased development at the 4-armed larval stage. The hybrids of T. hardwickii and M. globulus ceased development at the gastrula stage, suggesting that these species have a greater degree of genetically isolation distance. In hybrids of T. toreumaticus and strongylocentrotid Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus (A. Agassiz, 1864), larval skeletons expressed features from both species. These results suggest that traits of hybrids are derived not only from one or both original species, but that a mosaic effect can be obtained depending on the traits. These results indicate that temnopleurids have the weaker fertilization block mechanisms. Isozyme analyses showed that hybrid prisms of T. toreumaticus eggs and M. globulus sperm possess enzymatic patterns of malate dehydrogenase derived from each parent, whereas the enzymatic pattern of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase is derived from eggs, suggesting that malate dehydrogenase activity may be useful in detecting naturally occurring adult hybrids among these species in the Yamaguchi coastal area.


1974 ◽  
Vol 146 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
WILLIAM C. GRANT ◽  
KEVIN M. ULMER

Author(s):  
Vasily I. Radashevsky ◽  
Victoria V. Pankova

Two sympatric species earlier differentiated by means of starch gel electrophoresis within Polydora cf. ciliata from the Sea of Japan are here identified and their adult and gamete morphology are described and illustrated. One species bores into various shells and coralline algae while the other bores only into gastropod shells occupied by hermit crabs. Both species have the prostomium anteriorly incised to rounded, 0–4 eyes, the caruncle extending to the end of chaetiger 2, heavy falcate spines of chaetiger 5 with a lateral tooth, branchiae beginning on chaetiger 7, and the pygidium disc-like to cup-shaped with a dorsal gap to only an incision. Males of the two species differ in aggregations of spermatids. The more opportunistic borer, which occurs in a greater number of hosts, always has 8-cell-aggregations of spermatids. These worms are here referred to as P. calcarea. The other species, in which spermatids are always interconnected in tetrads, is here described as a new one, P. manchenkoi sp. nov. The two species also differ in that prominent brownish-yellow pigment appears on the posterior segments after fixation in formaldehyde in P. manchenkoi sp. nov. but not in P. calcarea. It is suggested that spermatid aggregates and spermatozoan morphology be included in future polychaete descriptions when possible.


Author(s):  
E. Macpherson ◽  
N. Raventos

The populations of three sympatric hermit crabs, Pagurus excavatus, Anapagurus alboranensis and Anapagurus petiti were studied in a shallow (15–25 m) sandy area in the north-western Mediterranean. Seasonal abundance, seasonal size frequency, sex ratio and reproductive periods were examined. Pagurus excavatus was the largest and most abundant species in the zone. Pagarus excavatus and Anapagarus alboranensis are sexually dimorphic in relation to size, with males reaching larger sizes than females. However, the males and females of Anapagurus petiti reach similar large sizes. Anapagurus petiti has a sex ratio that is female biased, whereas A. alboranensis and P. excavatus are 1:1. Anapagurus petiti showed a higher reproductive activity during warmer seasons, while in A. alboranensis the proportion of ovigerous females was high throughout the year, with a minimum in autumn. The activity and clutch size of P. excavatus decreased during summer.


1980 ◽  
Vol 159 (2) ◽  
pp. 337-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
NEIL A. MERCANDO ◽  
CHARLES F. LYTLE

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