Abstract

The crab Halicarcinus planatus is the only hymenosomatid crab that inhabits the southern tip of South America and is the only decapod species that reproduces twice a year in the Beagle Channel. In this article, we study the moult cycle in the field (moult frequency, analysis of size frequency distribution) and linked it with growth studied in the laboratory (absolute and per cent growth increment, Hiatt function). Hiatt functions were similar for males and females. Moult frequency was seasonal: in early austral spring and in austral summer. In females, the pubertal moult is the terminal moult, whereas males continue moulting after attaining the size of morphometric maturity. Moult increment was highly variable. The relationship between absolute moult increment and crab size was described by a quadratic function. Per cent growth increment decreased with size, and relationships were different for each sex: linear for females and quadratic for males. Seven and eight modal groups explained the size frequency distributions for females and males from the field, respectively, and revealed the existence of two cohorts of recruits per year. Further modal analysis was mainly hampered by the high variability of size increment that could make any moulting individual fall in its own or one of two following modal groups. The antagonism between growth and reproduction was evident in small males. We hypothesize that the terminal pubertal moult is an advantageous feature that allows females to maximize their investment in reproduction after their terminal moult, which allows this species to have two spawnings per year.

Highlights

  • Growth in crustaceans is a discontinuous process, in which the exoskeleton is periodically replaced during successive moults or ecdyses (Hartnoll 1985)

  • Results of this study provide first information on the growth of H. planatus in Southern South America

  • Richer de Forges (1977) shows the growth of H. planatus with animals kept in the laboratory

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Growth in crustaceans is a discontinuous process, in which the exoskeleton is periodically replaced during successive moults or ecdyses (Hartnoll 1985). In decapods with determinate growth, this moult may coincide with the last one of the growth process, defined as the terminal pubertal moult (Sampedro et al 1999, 2003; Corgos and Freire 2006; Vinuesa and Ferrari 2008). This moult marks the complete development of secondary traits, such as the differentiation of chelae in males and abdomen in females, thereby fixing their allometric growth pattern (Sampedro et al 1999). Studies on relative growth have been done in some species (e.g. Rhyncoplax coralicola, Halicarcinus cooki, Helgol Mar Res (2013) 67:555–566

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call