4.6 Article

Burrow architecture of the ghost crab Ocypode ceratophthalma on a sandy shore in Hong Kong

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HYDROBIOLOGIA
卷 560, 期 -, 页码 43-49

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10750-005-1088-2

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ghost crabs; Ocypode ceratophthalma; burrows; sandy shores; Hong Kong

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The ghost crab Ocypode ceratophthalma (Pallas) creates burrows of variety shapes at different ages. Juveniles (mean carapace length 11 mm) produced shallow J-shaped burrows, which incline vertically into the substratum (mean depth 160 mm). Larger crabs (17-25 mm carapace length) have Y-shaped and spiral burrows (mean depth 361 mm). These Y-shaped burrows have a primary arm, which extends to the surface forming the opening, and a secondary arm which terminates in a blind spherical ending. The two arms join in a single shaft and end with a chamber at the base. The secondary arms and chambers are believed to be used for mating or as a refuge from predation. The spiral burrows have spiral single channel ending in a chamber. Older crabs (mean carapace length 32.6 mm) had simple, straight single tube burrows, which inclined into the substratum at mean of 73 degrees and had a mean depth of 320 mm. During summer daytime periods, the burrows shelter the crabs from heat and desiccation stress. The sand surface temperature at the burrow opening was similar to 48 degrees C but temperatures inside the burrows can drop to 32 degrees C at a depth of 250 mm. Variation in the burrow architecture with crab age appears to be related to the crab's behaviour. Juvenile crabs have smaller gill areas and move out of the burrows regularly to renew their respiratory water and, as a result, they do not need a deep burrow. Larger crabs, in contrast, can tolerate prolonged periods without renewing their respiratory water and therefore create deeper and more complex burrows for mating and refuges.

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