Abstract

Studies on predat~on are often based solely on the measurement of predator consumption rates, providing little information on underlying behavioral mechan~sms. In this study, behav~oral observations were used In conjunchon with consumption rate analyses to investigate the predatory interactions between 2 brachyuran crabs, Ovalipes ocellatus and Calllnectes sapidus, and juvenile hard clams Adercenaria mercenaria (15 to 20 mm SL). In laboratory experlments, 0 . ocellatus was observed foraging on 5 densities of clams (24 to 120 m-') in sand w t h and without the addition of natural shell debris. Across all prey densities, crab consumption rates were significantly higher in sand than in the sand/shell substrate. Behavioral observations indicated that crabs foraged less efficiently in sand/shell. particularly at low prey densities, suggesting the existence of a low-density prey refuge in the more heterogeneous substrate. In comparative experiments, where 0. ocellatus and C. sapidus were permitted to feed on a single low prey density (24 m-') in 3 substrates (sand, sand/shell, sand/gravel), both crabs foraged most successfully in sand. Although consumption rates for both species were similar, behavioral observations demonstrate distinct differences in general crab behavior patterns Direct behavioral observation of predatory Interactions can provide crltlcal information often unavailable through the measurement of consumption rates alone. Results suggest that utilization of low denslty prey refuges in heterogeneous substrates may be an effectlve strategy for reducing portunid crab predation on juvenile hard clams in mariculture operations

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