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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Effects of biogenic structure on prey consumption by the xanthid crabs Eurytium limosum and Panopeus herbstii in a salt marsh

Sy Lee, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1994 - 
- Vol. 104, pp 39-47
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TLDR
It is shown that predation by P herbstii inflicted the greatest mortality on mussels of intermediate (20 to 40 mm shell length) size because larger mussels have a refuge in size and small mussels has a spatial refuge within the interstices of oyster clumps.
Abstract
The predatory xanthid crabs Eurytjum limosurn and Panopeus herbstii are common components of benthic assemblages in different intertidal habitats within salt marshes around Sapelo Island. Georgia, USA. E. limosum feed primarily on other crabs and are found where cordgrass Spartina altemiflora stems are the dominant structural elements in the environment. P: herbstii feed largely on bivalve molluscs and are abundant in intertidal creeks where oyster Crassostrea virginica reefs are the predominant structural elements. We designed laboratory experiments to measure prey consumption rates by these 2 predators under conditions that simulated those experienced by each species in its respective habitat. Biogenic structure within the environment of each species reduced prey consumption rates. The mean (i. SD) number of fiddler crabs Uca puynax killed in 24 h by E. limosum was less (2.0 t 0.87 individuals) in the presence of stems than in their absence (2.9 + 1.63 individuals). Fiddler crabs had no refuge in size from predation by E. limosum. However, mortality rates of fiddler crabs exposed to predation by E. lirnosum were sex-dependent. Males of U. pugnax sometimes escaped the predator's grasp by autotomizing their prominent major chela and consequently when prey were offered in an equal sex ratio significantly (paired t-test, p = 0.03) fewer males (4.3 f 2.55) than females (5.7 + 2.65) were killed by E. limosurn in 48 h. We believe that predation by mud crabs may contribute to male-biased sex ratios that are commonly observed in natural populations of fiddler crabs. Oyster shell clumps influenced the predator-prey interaction between P herbstil and the ribbed mussel Geukensia dernissa In a simulated intertidal creek environment. Mussels attached to the exterior (exposed) surfaces of an oyster clump suffered a 3.5 times greater mortality than those attached to the inside (concealed) surface of the clump. Results of previous studies in whlch prey were offered as isolated individuals suggest that k? herbstii should have the greatest impact on small (<20 mm shell length) mussels. However, by simulating natural conditions, we showed that predation by P herbstii inflicted the greatest mortality on mussels of intermediate (20 to 40 mm shell length) size because larger mussels have a refuge in size and small mussels have a spatial refuge within the interstices of oyster clumps. Our findings suggest that xanthid crabs have a greater impact within salt marsh communities than previously recognized and emphasize the importance of using 'context-sensitive' experiments to explore predator-prey interactions.

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Mollusks as ecosystem engineers: the role of shell production in aquatic habitats

TL;DR: It is suggested that shell producers should not be neglected as a targets of conservation, restoration and habitat management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mangrove macrobenthos: Assemblages, services, and linkages

TL;DR: There is a strong need for evaluating mangrove macrobenthos assemblages as a component of the connected biotic resources in the land-sea continuum, rather than as an isolated faunal group.
Journal ArticleDOI

Criteria for prey size-selection in molluscivorous crabs with contrasting claw morphologies

TL;DR: The structural and ecological features evolved by molluscan prey that effectively reduce the risk of predation and thus facilitate the continued coexistence of predator and prey are also briefly considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Benthic macrofaunal communities of three sites in San Francisco Bay invaded by hybrid Spartina, with comparison to uninvaded habitats

TL;DR: It is suggested that the invasive Spartina hybrid in south San Francisco Bay can have differing effects on sediment ecosystems, possibly depending on the location, age, or type of habitats involved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tropical mangrove ecology: Physical and biotic factors influencing ecosystem structure and function

TL;DR: In this article, the interplay between physical and biotic influences in the ecology of tropical mangals is investigated and the authors propose an approach integrating the two sources of influences, such as sesarmine crabs feeding and bioturbation activities.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Energy Flow in the Salt Marsh Ecosystem of Georgia

John M. Teal
- 01 Oct 1962 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Size-Limited Predation: An Observational and Experimental Approach with the Mytilus-Pisaster Interaction

R. T. Paine
- 01 Aug 1976 - 
TL;DR: The significance of size-limited predation is that prey and predator can coexist in very intimate proximity, that the surviving prey often attain large sizes and probably make a re- productive contribution disproportionately greater than their abundance, and that these same prey diversify the spatial structure of the environment, usually by adding a vertical dimension not otherwise present.
BookDOI

The Ecology of a Salt Marsh

TL;DR: In the field of ecology, there are two long-standing ways to study large ecosystems such as lakes, forests, and salt-marsh estuaries: the holo-logic approach and the merological approach as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution of fiddler crabs in georgia salt marshes

John M. Teal
- 01 Apr 1958 - 
TL;DR: This paper deals with the problem of why the crabs live in certain habitats within their range and not in others, not what determines or has determined their geographical range.
Journal ArticleDOI

Refuges for infaunal bivalves from blue crab, Callinectes sapidus (Rathbun), predation in Chesapeake Bay

TL;DR: The protection afforded infaunal bivalves by these spatial or structural refuges is not absolute, although living deep within the sediment or within vegetation beds reduces the risk of predation in comparison to living near the sediment surface or in unvegetated areas.
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