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Recruitment to adult habitats following marine planktonic development in the fiddler crabs, Uca pugilator, U. pugnax, and U. minax

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TLDR
A PCR-RFLP technique was developed to identify individuals from the genus Uca to species from first zoea through the early crab stages, and showed that U. minax reinvades low-salinity adult habitats at settlement, following planktonic larval development in the coastal ocean.
Abstract
Three congeneric species of fiddler crabs, Uca pugilator (Bosc, 1802), U. pugnax (Smith, 1870), and U. minax (LeConte, 1855), co-occur in estuaries along the east coast of North America, from Cape Cod to northern Florida. Although U. minax adults are generally found at lower salinities than the other two species, the distributions of all three species overlap to some degree. The distribution of megalopae and juvenile fiddler crabs (from first crab stage to those with a carapace width of 3.0 mm) was examined at four sites along a salinity gradient (from 35.0±2.0‰ to 3.0±3.0‰; \(\bar x\, \pm \,{\text{SD}} \) ) in the North Inlet Estuary, South Carolina, USA, in August 2002. A PCR-RFLP technique was developed to identify individuals from the genus Uca to species from first zoea through the early crab stages. An examination of the distribution of early life stages showed that U. minax reinvades low-salinity adult habitats at settlement, following planktonic larval development in the coastal ocean. Also, juveniles of U. pugilator were found to occupy Spartina alterniflora stands, where adult conspecifics rarely occur. Species frequencies were different for adults compared to early life stages in low-salinity areas of the marsh, where populations overlap. Settlement and survival dynamics of early life-history stages in wet and dry years likely determine the distribution of adult Uca spp. populations along salinity gradients in estuarine ecosystems.

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Citations
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The distribution of fiddler crabs (Uca) along the coast of Brazil: implications for biogeography of the western Atlantic Ocean

TL;DR: The biogeographical patterns of the extant species can be used to reconstruct an evolutionary scenario for Uca in the tropical and temperate zones of the western Atlantic Ocean.
Journal ArticleDOI

The geographic structure of morphological variation in eight species of fiddler crabs (Ocypodidae: genus Uca) from the eastern United States and Mexico

TL;DR: Investigating the geographic ranges of eight species of fiddler crabs from the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of North America indicates that morphological divergence among populations can occur over shorter distances than expected based on dispersal potential.
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South American homogeneity versus Caribbean heterogeneity: population genetic structure of the western Atlantic fiddler crab Uca rapax (Brachyura, Ocypodidae)

TL;DR: The authors' data suggest the absence of possible barriers to gene flow between mainland sites, whereas a hindrance to genetic exchange seems to be present between mainland and Caribbean islands as well as among the islands.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Salinity Stress on Survival, Metabolism, Limb Regeneration, and Ecdysis in UCA pugnax

TL;DR: This article investigated physiological and metabolic changes in the molt cycle of Uca pugnax in response to different salinity levels by assessing the survival, respiration, and post-molt tissue protein and carbohydrate content.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of fiddler crabs (genus Uca Leach, 1814) in South Africa

TL;DR: Fiddler crabs occur globally across tropical and subtropical coastal habitats including mangrove swamps, which are in decline worldwide, whereas information on African species is scarce and future research should focus on less-studied Uca populations.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Primer-directed enzymatic amplification of DNA with a thermostable DNA polymerase

TL;DR: A thermostable DNA polymerase was used in an in vitro DNA amplification procedure, the polymerase chain reaction, which significantly improves the specificity, yield, sensitivity, and length of products that can be amplified.
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.
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