Abstract

The arboreal crab Parasesarma leptosoma has been recently discovered at Mngazana, a southerly mangrove system in southern Africa, where crab tree preferences were studied using an indirect (browse leaf damage) and a direct (tree traps) method. The extent of crab induced leaf damage was compared for three mangrove species at two sites, one next to a tidal creek and one away from the creek. Using ANOVA, significant differences were found between tree species (P 0.05) in either nutrients or median particle size. Thus, R. mucronata, especially near the creek, had higher nutrient value and was probably more palatable and could explain observed differences in crab distribution. Very little browse damage was encountered in saplings below 10 cm. Most poles chopped by the local communities are R. mucronata in the 15–20 cm category, which coincides with peak crab frequencies in the 15–25 cm size classes for R. mucronata and B. gymnorrhiza, so that this selective harvesting is affecting this crab population maximally. Predictions were made as to the effect of crab loss, tree replacement rate and alternatives to chopping, which would boost community socio-economic levels and reduce the anthropogenic pressure on this biodiverse southerly mangrove system.

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