EPIBIOSIS AND ORNAMENTAL COVER PATTERNS OF THE SPIDER CRAB MAJA-SQUINADO ON THE GALICIAN COAST, NORTHWESTERN SPAIN - INFLUENCE OF BEHAVIORAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE HOST

Citation
L. Fernandez et al., EPIBIOSIS AND ORNAMENTAL COVER PATTERNS OF THE SPIDER CRAB MAJA-SQUINADO ON THE GALICIAN COAST, NORTHWESTERN SPAIN - INFLUENCE OF BEHAVIORAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE HOST, Journal of crustacean biology, 18(4), 1998, pp. 728-737
Citations number
20
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology
ISSN journal
02780372
Volume
18
Issue
4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
728 - 737
Database
ISI
SICI code
0278-0372(1998)18:4<728:EAOCPO>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
This paper examines the variation in the body-covering patterns of the spider crab Maja squinado in the Ria de Arousa (Galicia, northwestern Spain), as related to habitat, season, size, terminal molt, and migra tions of the host. Individuals inhabiting shallow zones, generally cha racterized by their smaller size and more frequent molts (juveniles), showed a marked self-decorating behavior and a higher level of body co vering than in adults inhabiting deeper areas. In adults, epibiosis wa s more common than self-decoration, The availability of material for d ecoration, primarily seaweeds, was greater in the spring and summer se asons, when the highest covering levels were reached. There was a nega tive correlation between the degree of covering and spider-crab size, with a decline in decorative behavior after the terminal molt. After t he terminal molt. the animals migrate to deeper areas, where epibiosis is dominant, with a heightened presence of bryozoans, barnacles, and encrusting seaweeds, which require a stable substrate (absence of molt s) in order to develop. In shallow zones, the erect seaweeds were domi nant, occupying in many cases 100% of the body surface. In the deeper zones, the dorsal cephalothorax was the area with the greatest amount of cover. The legs were more sparsely covered and the ventral cephalot horax, affected only by epibiosis, was characterized by low levels of coverage.