Cyrtograpsus angulatus and Chasmagnathus granulata (Grapsidae) are the two dominant decapod crustacean species in the outer parts of Mar Chiquita Lagoon, the southernmost in a series of coastal lagoons that occur along the temperate Atlantic coasts of South America. Distribution and habitat preferences (water and sediment type) in these crab species were studied in late spring. There is evidence of ontogenetic changes in habitat selection of both species. Recruitment of C. angulatus takes place mainly in crevices of tube-building polychaete (Ficopomatus enigmaticus) "reefs" and, to a lesser extent, also in other protected microhabitats {under stones). In the latter, mostly somewhat larger juveniles were found, suggesting that these are used as a refuge for growing individuals. Adults are most frequently found on unprotected muddy and sandy beaches. C. angulatus was found in all parts of Mar Chiquita Lagoon, including freshwater, brackish, and marine habitats. C. granutata, in contrast, was restricted to the lower parts of the lagoon, where brackish water predominates and freshwater or marine conditions occur only exceptionally. It showed highest population density on "dry mud" flats and in Spartina densiflora grassland, where it can build stable burrows and where high contents of organic matter occur in the sediment. Such habitats are characterized by mixed populations of juveniles (including newly settled recruits) and adults, males and females {including a high percentage of ovigerous). Unstable "wet mud" as well as stony sand were found to be inhabited by chiefly adult populations, with only few ovigerous females. In "dry mud" flats, the proportion of males increased vertically with increasing level in the intertidal zone, showing a significantly increasing trend also in their average body size. These observations may be explained by higher resistance of males, in particular of large individuals, to desiccation, salinity, and temperature stress occurring in the upper intertidal. However, an opposite, or no such, tendency was found in the distribution of ovigerous and nonovigerous females, respectively. With increasing distance from the water edge, salinity increased and pH decreased significantiy in C. granulata burrows, whereas temperature showed no consistent tendency within the intertidal gradient. A highly significant linear relationship (r = -0.794; P <0.001) between salinity and pH in water from crab burrows is described. This regression hne is significantly different from one that had been observed in water from th e lagoon, indicating consistently lower pH values at any salinity level in burrow water. This is interpreted as a result of crab and/or microbial respiration.
The grapsid crabs Chasmagnathus granulata and Cyrtograpsus angulatus are considered as key species within the benthic communities of estuaries and brackish coastal lagoons in the southwestern Atlantic region. In controlled laboratory experiments, we studied the intensity of interspecific predation as well as intra-and intercohort cannibalism in setllers in relation to refuge Ž . availability, predator characteristics species, size, sex, nutritional state , and the presence or Ž . absence of an alternative food source Artemia nauplii . In both species, the intensity of Ž . intracohort cannibalism among recently settled crabs instars I and II, AsettlersB was low, with ca. 5% mortality during 48 h experimental observation periods. Larger juveniles and adults of both species, by contrast, preyed heavily on the settlers. Predation was significantly reduced when refuges were available for the settlers. Hunger of the predators enhanced in general the predation rate. In the presence of alternative food, the consumption of settlers was significantly reduced. In C. granulata, adult females ate more settlers than the males, probably as a consequence of differences in the morphometric traits of their chelae. Cannibalism and predation by juvenile and adult crabs may play an important role in the regulation of recruitment success for both species and hence, in the structure of estuarine benthic communities. q
Crabs are among the most conspicuous and ecologically important invertebrates of the large intertidal zones that characterize estuarine and protected coastal areas in temperate regions. The habitat, population structure and breeding cycle of Chasmagnathus granulatus (Brachyura: Varunidae), a semiterrestrial burrowing crab endemic to the warm temperate coasts of the Southwestern Atlantic, were studied in San Antonio Bay (Argentina), near the southern limit of its range. San Antonio Bay has no freshwater input, winter is relatively colder, and summer warmer, than northern habitats of this species. Crabs lived both in vegetated and unvegetated zones, but density and sex ratio varied among dates and zones. The maximum observed density was 136 crabs/m 2 , the maximum carapace width (CW) was 32 mm (males) and 29.8 mm (females), ovigerous females were found only in November and January, and the smallest ovigerous female measured 17 mm CW. The population structure, spatial distribution, and recruitment pattern of C. granulatus did not differ between San Antonio Bay and northern habitats. The higher density, smaller maximum size and shorter reproductive cycle observed in San Antonio cannot be atributed to changes associated with a latitudinal cline and other factors, such as thermal amplitude and food availability, need to be studied. Hydrobiologia (2005) 537: 217-228 Ó Springer 2005
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