Ca. Robinson et al., Ranging behaviour of a large freshwater invertebrate, the white-clawed crayfish Austropotamobius pallipes, FRESHW BIOL, 44(3), 2000, pp. 509-521
1. Radio-telemetry and mark-recapture methods were used to study the summer
movements of adult and juvenile white-clawed crayfish, Austropotamobius pa
llipes from a wild population in a small braided stream, Dalton Beck, North
Yorkshire, U.K. Radio-transmitters were attached to the chelae of 18 large
(> 35 mm carapace length) crayfish and individuals were subsequently locat
ed to within 0.15 m. Additionally a total of 888 crayfish were marked with
carapace brands, and 83 were recaptured.
2. Radio-tracked crayfish exhibited significantly greater local activity at
dusk (21.00-00.00) than at dawn (03.00-06.00), or during morning (09.00-12
.00) and afternoon (15.00-18.00) monitoring periods.
3. The greatest movements of radio-tracked crayfish occurred within 2 days
of release. After this time, periods of residence were interspersed by move
ments to new locations, interpreted as establishment of ephemeral home area
s. It is suggested that the initial large movements were the result of a 'f
right response' following capture.
4. Movements varied widely between individuals, some moving more than 300 m
in 10 days, while others showed little movement over an equivalent time pe
riod. Mean (+/- SE) daily movements were 4.6 +/- 3.0 m for males and 1.5 +/
- 1.0 m for females. Although crayfish often used specific home sites for i
n excess of 7 days, displaced animals did not return to home sites.
5. The total distances travelled and the mean distance travelled per day by
individual radio-tagged crayfish did not differ significantly between upst
ream or downstream directions or between males and females. This was also t
he case for marked crayfish used in mark-recapture studies.
6. Positive correlations between distance moved per day and size (carapace
length) were found for downstream movements by male and female crayfish, bu
t not for upstream movements.
7. Some preliminary observations of the response of crayfish to flood event
s suggested that these could be catastrophic with two out of five tracked c
rayfish found dead after a high stream-discharge event.