Abstract

In this study, the subject of whether investment in one bilateral structure was linked to investment in the homologous bilateral opposite structure was investigated. Male fiddler crabs (genus Uca, family Ocypodidae) displayed strong bilateral claw differentiation of function and size, which are used for feeding (minor claw) or display/combat (major claw). Females had similar-sized feeding claws. Linkage between claw size was investigated by estimating the deviations from an overall fitted regression of claw length to body size. The positive correlations of the deviations of claw size for major and minor claws of males and between right and left claws of females, relative to body size, suggested a linkage in investment between one claw and the corresponding claw on the other side of the body, for both monomorphic females and dimorphic males. A signal to send resources may be effectively gated to the claw complex, suggesting that positively correlated resources are allocated to both claws. Positive correlations were also found at the interspecific level. The fiddler crab model, described here, gives access to study the linkage in symmetric and asymmetric bilateral structures in the same species with a connection to the macroevolutionary level.

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