2000
DOI: 10.1086/318099
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Locomotion, Respiratory Physiology, and Energetics of Amphibious and Terrestrial Crabs

Abstract: The transition from breathing air to breathing water requires physiological and morphological adaptations. The study of crustaceans in transitional habitats provides important information as to the nature of these adaptations. This article addresses the physiology of air breathing in amphibious and terrestrial crabs and their relative locomotor abilities. Potamonautes warreni is an apparently amphibious freshwater crab from southern Africa, Cardisoma hirtipes is an air-breathing gecarcinid crab with some depen… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Among Decapoda, terrestrial living evolved several times in different habitats (3, 97, 311, 312). Concurrently, gas exchange evolved from diffusion-limited gill respiration to perfusion-limited lung respiration.…”
Section: Section 2 Air Breathing In Invertebrates: Transitions From mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among Decapoda, terrestrial living evolved several times in different habitats (3, 97, 311, 312). Concurrently, gas exchange evolved from diffusion-limited gill respiration to perfusion-limited lung respiration.…”
Section: Section 2 Air Breathing In Invertebrates: Transitions From mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of these adaptations resemble those of other Decapoda living in freshwater or on land (cf. Greenaway 1999; Adamczewska and Morris 2000;Holdich 2001).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chiromantes dehaani did not show a clear migration pattern, in contrast to C. haematocheir, and its population density was higher in the wetland area along the riverbank throughout the study period. Among Decapoda, land crabs are highly adaptable to land areas due to their ability to obtain oxygen from air (Adamczewska & Morris 2000). It is assumed that C. dehaani depends more on water than does C. haematocheir, as the number of active individuals decreased when the humidity was lower.…”
Section: Migration and Distribution Patterns Of Adult Crabsmentioning
confidence: 99%