Vol. 60, 2021
(update: 2021.06.18; 08.06)
Ecomorphological Adaptations of
Second Maxilliped-setation: Insights from Three Species of Fiddler
Crabs from Panama
Shirley
S.L. Lim1,* and Sarah J.A.
Goh1
doi:10.6620/ZS.2021.60-48
1Ecology
Lab, Natural Sciences & Science Education, NIE, Nanyang
Technological University, 1 Nanyang Walk, Singapore 637616, Republic of
Singapore. *Correspondence: E-mail: shirley.lim@nie.edu.sg;
shirley.limsl@ntu.edu.sg (Lim).
E-mail: sarahgohjaeann@gmail.com (Goh)
Received 23 March 2021 / Accepted 29
May 2021
Communicated by Benny K.K. Chan
The functional morphology of maxilliped-setation in three species of fiddler crabs—Petruca panamensis, Leptuca terpsichores and L. beebei—collected
from Panama were studied using a comparative ecomorphological approach.
The coverage of spoon-tipped (ST) and plumose (P) setae on the inner
surface of the second maxilliped were noted, and the abundance of each
setal type was enumerated,
with crab carapace width as the covariate. These attributes were then
related to the sediment particle size characterization of their
respective collection sites for an ecomorphological comparison. All
three species have mixed setation, albeit in different proportions of
coverage. For L. terpsichores, the ST:P coverage was consistently ca. 70%:30% whereas there was approximately equal coverage of both setal types (i.e., 50%
ST:50% P) on the maxillipeds of L. beebei and P. panamensis.
Analysis of Covariance (ANCOVA) results of setal counts between the
sexes in each species showed that the number of ST and P setae did not
differ significantly between males and females, indicating an absence
of sexual dimorphism in mouthpart setae. When all three species were
compared—sexes combined within each species—ANCOVA results reveal that
for any crab of a given size, there were significantly more ST setae on
the second maxilliped of L. terpsichores (sediment from sampling site classified as ‘moderately-sorted medium sand’) than L. beebei (sediment from sampling site classified as ‘moderately-sorted fine sand’) and P. panamensis
(a rocky-habitat species); no significant difference was detected
between ST abundance in the latter two species. Current results provide
unequivocal quantitative evidence that the abundance of ST setae can be
an indicator to differentiate habitats down to the level of different
sand-grain size, i.e., medium sand versus fine sand habitats of L. terpsichores and L. beebei, respectively. Both L. beebei and P. panamensis had significantly fewer ST setae than L. terpsichores,
possibly because the former two species’ habitats have sediments with
sand grains that are less coarse than the latter’s. On rocks, P. panamensis
does not produce pseudofecal pellets as they directly swallow food
materials pinched from the rock surfaces without sorting, rendering the
role of ST setae of secondary importance. The three species did not
differ significantly in P setae abundance, suggesting that the adaptive
function of this type of setae to habitat characteristics remains
debatable. The significance of ST setae as an ecomorphological
adaptation for efficient food extraction from sandy sediments is, thus,
evident in L. terpsichores. As for other two species—L. beebei and P. panamensis—that
live in environments with finer sediment grain sizes, the adaptive role
of ST setae is of diminished functional importance. Fiddler crab
species with mixed setal types may have greater potential to exhibit
feeding plasticity should their habitats be threatened.
Key words: Crustacean
mouthparts, Functional morphology, Habitat adaptation, Plumose setae,
Spoon-tipped setae.
Citation:
Lim SSL, Goh SJA. 2021. Ecomorphological adaptations of second
maxilliped-setation: insights from three species of fiddler crabs fromPanama. Zool Stud 60:48. doi:10.6620/ZS.2021.60-48.

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