A TEST FOR RESOURCE-DEFENSE MATING IN THE FIDDLER-CRAB UCA BEEBEI

Citation
Jh. Christy et Um. Schober, A TEST FOR RESOURCE-DEFENSE MATING IN THE FIDDLER-CRAB UCA BEEBEI, Animal behaviour, 48(4), 1994, pp. 795-802
Citations number
36
Categorie Soggetti
Behavioral Sciences",Zoology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00033472
Volume
48
Issue
4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
795 - 802
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-3472(1994)48:4<795:ATFRMI>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
Males of the fiddler crab Uca beebei defend, court from and attract fe males to burrows in intertidal mud flats. Females sequentially enter a nd leave several male burrows before they stay in one, mate and breed. This reproductive pattern is common among fiddler crabs and suggests that males may compete for females by competing for high-quality breed ing sites and females may choose mates based on burrow quality. These ideas were tested for U. beebei by comparing structural features of (1 ) male and female burrows and (2) the male burrows females entered and left and those in which they mated. Male burrows had narrower opening s and shafts than female burrows, but neither these nor 10 other burro w features differed between the male burrows females left and those in which they mated. Thus, there was no evidence of resource-defence mat ing in U. beebei. This pattern of mating behaviour may be rare in the genus because burrows suitable for breeding generally may be abundant and available to both sexes. Male fiddler crabs may compete for burrow s due to their value for post-copulatory mate guarding and females may choose mates on the basis of courtship displays, not the quality of b urrows for breeding.