Host-Adoption in the Commensal Polychaete Nereis Fucata

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.

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.


2020 ◽  
Vol 640 ◽  
pp. 117-126
Author(s):  
GFB Rodrigues ◽  
CS Ballarin ◽  
A Fransozo ◽  
FW Amorim

Hermit crabs are ideal organisms for assessing how species that share resources can coexist, as these crustacean species have an intimate relationship with gastropod shells and therefore compete for this particular resource. There is compelling evidence that hermit crabs do not interact with gastropod shells randomly, but few studies have investigated the community-level interactions between hermit crabs and shells. Here we used network analyses to present the first community-level assessment of the structure of a hermit crab-shell interaction network in a coastal region in southeastern Brazil in order to identify mechanisms that underlie hermit crab coexistence. Our results show that the hermit crab-gastropod shell interaction network was non-nested, specialized, and modular. The modular network structure revealed differences in resource use among hermit crab species. The network structure departs from those of free-living species in which the lack of interaction intimacy between species leads to a nested pattern. Thus, the morphological specialization of hermit crabs in relation to their host shells appears to play an important role in structuring the community-level interaction network. Future studies should evaluate the relative importance of abundance and functional traits in the structure of this unique interaction network.


2018 ◽  
Vol 96 (5) ◽  
pp. 454-459 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Arce ◽  
A. Córdoba-Aguilar

Several prey species use refuges to avoid predation. Prey need to abandon and shift between refuges. However, during such shifting, prey can be vulnerable to predators. We hypothesize that predator presence may induce prey to make mistakes in choosing their refuge. We tested this by inducing the hermit crab Calcinus californiensis Bouvier, 1898 to shift to a new empty gastropod shell (three different species: Columbella Lamarck, 1799, Nerita scabricosta Lamarck, 1822, and Stramonita biserialis (Blainville, 1832)) in the absence and presence of Eriphia squamata Stimpson, 1860, which is an efficient shell-crushing natural crab predator. We expected that when a predator was present, hermit crabs would (i) inspect fewer shells and (or) (ii) change to a shell that is either too heavy to allow escape or unfit in size to accommodate the hermit crab. Although the first prediction was met, the second prediction was supported only when S. biserialis shells were used. Thus, in the presence of a predator, hermit crabs prioritize escaping by selecting lighter shells, which would allow the crab to move faster. We conclude that predator presence may induce prey to make mistakes in refuge selection, suggesting that this has severe consequences in future predatory events.


2002 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 245-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juarez C. B. Pezzuti ◽  
Alexander Turra ◽  
Fosca P. P. Leite

Hermit crabs use gastropod shells as shelter and are adapted to follow chemical cues released from tissues of dead or injured gastropods as a way to find new and more adequate shells. The species composition, crab size, shell types adequacy and physical condition were compared between attracted individuals and crabs collected in previous samples. The previous sampling was carried out in five areas before each experiment. Then, five baits of crushed gastropods in nylon net bags were installed in these areas. Three samples were taken at 30min intervals, capturing all crabs within a circle of 60cm diameter. Attraction of hermit crabs was tested for four different gastropod baits to verify specificity of the chemical cues. Clibanarius antillensis, Pagurus brevidactylus and Paguristes tortugae were collected in the study area. Pagurus brevidactylus, the smallest species, turned out to be more attracted than the 2 other species. The results showed that attracted crabs utilized more gastropod shell types than that collected in previous samples, however shell utilization pattern did not differ between them. Attracted animals were slightly smaller (shield length) than those collected in the previous samples but did not present significant differences in shell adequacy and condition. The four experimental baits attracted the crabs in similar ways not indicating a specific response from the crabs. The fact that attracted animals were smaller suggested that the attraction to dead gastropods might enable the acquisition of a new and larger shell and, consequently, chains of shell exchange between the attracted crabs.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 302-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sally E. Walker

Biological parameters, in addition to physical parameters, are important in determining past ecology, taphonomy and the effects of human intervention. Research conducted on a Recent community of gastropods and two late Pleistocene fossil assemblages from Puerto Penasco, Mexico, reveal a complex pattern of interrelationships among gastropod shell users. First, shell representation is biased in the intertidal of Puerto Penasco, Mexico, because of a complex mosaic of secondary shell occupants. Hermit crabs (five species) represent almost half (47%) of the intertidal gastropod shell resource available throughout the year. Living snails are represented by 17 out of the 32 gastropod taxa. Additionally, hermit amphipods (three species) occupy ten gastropod taxa. Hermit crabs and hermit amphipods retain the shells in anomalous habitats (that differ from the living snail). Second, physical factors act as a temporal component which affects shell use and availability during the seasons at Puerto Penasco. Late winter storms mix-up the intertidal distribution of living gastropods and hermit crabs. Subtidal to low intertidal shells appear in the high intertidal; living snails are buried under a thick bed of sand. Most importantly, empty shells become available, and the hermit amphipod population peaks. Thus, physical factors contribute to the demise of living snails (i.e, burial by sand) and the mixing of shells. However, the organisms (hermit crabs and amphipods) maintain this motif by retaining the shells in the anomalous habitats.Third, all hermit crab species (Paguristes anahuacus, Pagurus lepidus, Paguristes roseus), except for one (the high intertidal, Clibanarius digueti), have epi-and endobionts associated with the gastropod shell. More than 20 species of invertebrates bore into or encrust the hermitted shells at Penasco. Of these, the encrusting bryozoans Hippothoa, Hippopodinella adpressa, ?Floridia antiqua, Lichenopora, Antropora tincta and the boring spionid polychaetes (Polydora commensalis, Polydora, Boccardia) and spirorbid polychaetes (Spirorbis; Serpula) are important bionts to use in recognizing hermit crab shell use in the fossil record of the northern Gulf of California. The encrusting bryozoans (H. adpressa and A. tincta) are present on Pleistocene gastropods at the unusual Pelican Point terrace deposit (large gastropod shells preserved among large bryozoan encrusted cobbles) indicating hermit crab inhabitation. These bryozoans appear to protect the gastropods from taphonomic alteration.Finally, reworked fossil shells occur within the hermit crab guild and the beach drift assemblage. Hermit crabs retain fossil shells of the moon snail, Polinices, (n=two occurrences) and Turritella (n=3 occurrences). These species are common in the coquina beach rock which makes up the intertidal substrate of Puerto Penasco. However, reworking of fossil coquina is quite substantial in the beach drift assemblage. Three sampling periods (=150 samples) indicate the following: three species of fossil bivalves (Chione, Trachvcardium and Glycimeris) and five species of fossil gastropods (Oliva, Polinices, Muricanthus, Nassarius, and Turritella) dominated the beach drift assemblage (over 16, 600 fossil whole shells/fragments). Fossil Chione represented the most shells (958 valves;>15,557 fragments). Recent bivalves were represented by 1115 shells/fragments (representing 12 species) and Recent gastropods contained mostly fragments (1069 pieces; 30 species). Additionally, the fossil gastropods were large, unlike the species that occur today, which have been picked over by humans. Thus, a large part of active beach deposition at Puerto Penasco contains late Pleistocene shells, taphonomically altered by secondary occupants and beachcombers.


Behaviour ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 143 (10) ◽  
pp. 1281-1290 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Briffa ◽  
Rebecca Williams

AbstractChemical communication is likely to play an important role during agonistic encounters in aquatic crustaceans but the use of chemical signals is difficult to observe. An alternative approach to direct observation is to collect water that has contained fighting animals and then expose a focal animal of the same species to the cue water and monitor its behaviour. Here we investigate the possibility of the use of chemical cues during 'shell fights' in the hermit crab Pagurus bernhardus. Focal crabs exposed to the fighting cue spent more time withdrawn into their gastropod shell, less time on locomotion and less time searching for food than did those exposed to cues from non-fighting hermit crabs or those treated with plain sea water. At the end of the observation period we used a novel stimulus to induce a startle response in order to probe the focal crab's motivational state for this exploratory behaviour. Those exposed to the fighting cue water took longer to recover than crabs in the other groups, indicating that their motivation was lower. These findings provide clear evidence that chemical cues are a feature of these contests.


Zootaxa ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 3244 (1) ◽  
pp. 59 ◽  
Author(s):  
IVAN MARIN ◽  
SERGEY SINELNIKOV

A new species of amphipod from the genus Metopelloides Gurjanova, 1938 (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Stenothoidae) asso-ciated with two species of sublittoral hermit crab species, Pagurus pectinatus (Stimpson, 1858) and Elassochirus cavi-manus (Miers, 1879) (Crustacea: Decapoda: Paguridae), is described from the Russian coasts of the Sea of Japan. The newspecies clearly differs from the congeners by the combination of morphological features such as telson without lateralspines, an elongated mandibular palp with single apical setae, the structures of distoventral palmar margins of subchelaon gnathopods I and II in females, bright white-red body coloration. Thus, the record of Metopelloides paguri sp. nov.represents the second record of the family Stenothoidae in the association with sublittoral hermit crabs from the Sea of Japan.


2003 ◽  
Vol 77 (3) ◽  
pp. 576-582 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sally E. Walker ◽  
Steven M. Holland ◽  
Lisa Gardiner

Land hermit crabs (Coenobitidae) are widespread and abundant in Recent tropical and subtropical coastal environments, yet little is known about their fossil record. A walking trace, attributed to a land hermit crab, is described herein as Coenobichnus currani (new ichnogenus and ichnospecies). This trace fossil occurs in an early Holocene eolianite deposit on the island of San Salvador, Bahamas. The fossil trackway retains the distinctive right and left asymmetry and interior drag trace that are diagnostic of modern land hermit crab walking traces. The overall size, dimensions and shape of the fossil trackway are similar to those produced by the modem land hermit crab, Coenobita clypeatus, which occurs in the tropical western Atlantic region. The trackway was compared to other arthropod traces, but it was found to be distinct among the arthropod traces described from dune or other environments. The new ichnogenus Coenobichnus is proposed to accommodate the asymmetry of the trackway demarcated by left and right tracks. The new ichnospecies Coenobichnus currani is proposed to accommodate the form of the proposed Coenobichnus that has a shell drag trace.


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