Abstract

A high natural mortality rate has been documented for the saucer scallop Amusium balloti, an Australian scallop found on sediment bottoms at 30–60 m deep, but little is known about the causes of mortality. We studied escape responses of A. balloti to five consumers common in the bycatch of the scallop fishery as a means of identifying potential predators. The scallop showed a negligible to weak response when touched with the sea star Pentaceraster regulus and the red portunid crab Portunus rubromarginatus. The response was similar to that observed when the scallop was touched with a plastic object. In contrast, A. balloti showed a consistent and vigorous swimming response to contact with the slipper lobster Thenus orientalis, the blue swimmer crab Portunus pelagicus and the coral crab Charybdis cruciata. This was not a generalized response to crustaceans, given the scallop's weak response to the red portunid crab. This is the first report of a scallop that has a strong swimming escape response to contact with decapod crustacean predators.

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