Abstract

This study analyses the spatial distribution of burrowing by the soldier crab Mictyris longicarpus (Mictyridae) in relation to the topography of intertidal sandflats. Four different locations were sampled in Port Jackson and Botany Bay (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia). In each location, abundances of crabs and the proportion of juvenile crabs varied among sites 50 m 2 and tens of metres apart, but not between high- and lowshore levels, nor among shores. Topographic formations, referred to as humps and depressions, were common on the flats and were of the same order of size and spacing as the sites, which showed variation in numbers/sizes of crabs. Manipulative experiments were done in one of the locations to distinguish between the hypotheses that the spatial distribution of the crabs varied according to (1) topography, or (2) the composition of sediment in the different topographic features. In the first experiment, small plots (0.09 m 2 and 20 cm deep) of sediment were transplanted between humps and depressions, including appropriate controls for disturbance and translocation. The numbers and sizes of crabs colonizing the experimental plots were then measured. Differences in abundance among plots were found higher on the shore. Therefore, the experiment was repeated at highshore levels with increased replication. There were more crabs in depressions than in humps. The proportion of juveniles varied according to the type of sediment, but only in depressions. Heterogeneity and sediment were, therefore, important for explaining some of the spatial variability of the abundances of the crabs.

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