4.3 Article

Increased potential for shell competition among hermit crabs (Pagurus beringanus and Pagurus granosimanus) in the rocky intertidal

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0025315421000837

Keywords

Climate change; niche partitioning; sympatric populations; Washington state

Funding

  1. Crist Family Student Research Award in Biology Fund of Muhlenberg College
  2. Blinks-NSF REU-BEACON program of Friday Harbor Laboratories [DBI-1262239]

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The study found extensive overlap between two species of hermit crabs at some sites, contrary to previous findings from nearly 50 years ago. The researchers also provided a more comprehensive ranking of shell use and noted site-specific dominant shell use. This suggests that habitat partitioning by depth may have weakened at protected sites, potentially due to increasing temperatures causing one species of hermit crab to expand its range deeper into the intertidal.
We examined the prevalence and shell use of two species of hermit crabs (Pagurus granosimanus and Pagurus beringanus) in exposed and protected microhabitats at five sites in the rocky temperate intertidal on San Juan Island, Washington, to compare present habitat partitioning and potential interspecific competition to that reported nearly 50 years ago. We found that, in contrast to previous findings, the two species of hermit crabs overlapped extensively at some sites, typically those with less wave action. While the hermit crabs typically inhabited certain types of shells significantly more than others, and that use was congruent across microhabitats and species of hermit crabs at the same site, the dominant domicile differed substantially across sites. We provide a more complete ranking of shell use than previous authors and note site-specific dominant shell use. We conclude that previous habitat partitioning by depth may have weakened at protected sites. We hypothesize that increasing temperatures have caused P. granosimanus to expand its range deeper into the intertidal, which may increase the degree of interspecific competition for shells at the edge of the species' tidal height range, where they overlap. Whether the habitat shift by this hermit crab is due to recent alterations in climate (particularly elevated temperatures, ocean acidification and lower local open ocean salinity) is unknown, but warrants further study.

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