“…Since males primarily use their left minor chela to pick up food, they have reduced opportunities to feed during guarding (Yoshii, Takeshita, & Wada, 2009). When a solitary male encounters a guarding pair, a maleemale contest often occurs between the two males in Pagurus middendorffii (Wada et al, 1999; and Pagurus nigrofascia (Suzuki, Yasuda, Takeshita, & Wada, 2012;Yasuda et al, 2011), and the larger males or the guarding males are in the advantageous position in these contests Yasuda et al, 2012). Guarding males of Pagurus filholi and P. nigrofascia often climb up onto fronds of algae (Y. Hasaba, C. I. Yasuda, & S. Wada, personal observation) to sequester females from intruders and avoid maleemale contests (Kawaminami & Goshima, 2015), suggesting that guarding would be a beneficial behaviour for ensuring a mating opportunity.…”