Abstract

This is the first record of the burrows of the Japanese mitten crab Eriocheir japonica. Morphologies of the burrows found in the clay sediment used by this crab were recorded by excavating them in a small freshwater river in Japan. Only E. japonica was found inside 2 of the 10 burrows examined (15 crabs and one crab, respectively), and the other 8 were empty. Crabs of various sizes (6.1–47.0 mm in carapace width) were collected from inside the occupied burrows. Burrow morphology ranged from single tunnels to complex burrows with multiple openings and tunnels. Openings (2–10 cm in diameter) were mostly located underwater. The single tunnels were 14–65 cm long. Considering the different digging habits of other burrowing animals found in this area, it can be concluded that E. japonica constructed these burrows. Burrows resembled those of the Chinese mitten crab E. sinensis, but were different in their location (freshwater vs. tidal), sediment type (clay vs. sand and silt), opening placement (mainly underwater vs. intertidal) and occupation rate (low vs. high). The low occupation rate suggests that E. japonica do not always rest in their burrows and rather prefer to hide beneath the riverbed’s large rocks. These results reflect the adaptation of E. japonica to the unstable environment of Japanese rivers.

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