Abstract

Summary Monthly samples of the burrowing mud crab, Macrophthalmus hirtipes (Jacquinot 1853) were collected from February 1978 to April 1979 from a marine inlet, Governors Bay (43°38′S, 172°39′E) and from the Avon-Heathcote Estuary (43°33′S, 172°44′E), New Zealand. The estuarine population was generally unimodal and had an annual cycle of population change sustained by a concentrated summer recruitment. In contrast, the bay population was unimodal and bimodal at different times, and recruitment occurred thoughout the year with no clear peak. Both populations had equal sex ratios and were dominated by immature individuals (crabs⩽10·0 mm carapace width). Estuarine crabs were generally smaller than marine crabs. At both sites, ovigerous females were found from late May to early March; the smallest egg-bearing female measured CW 10·0 mm at the estuary and CW 10·5 mm at the bay. Cycles of ovarian and embryological development were similar at the two localities. Three peaks of egg oviposition occurred within one...

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