Abstract

The present study investigates the spatio-temporal variation in the density of the adults and larvae of the shore crab Pachygrapsus gracilis and identifies the reproductive period and the population structure of the species in the Marapanim estuary, in northern Brazil, in order to describe the biological characteristics of this equatorial population on the Atlantic coast. Specimens were collected manually every month over the course of a year. Adults were collected at four rocky outcrops in the upper and lower mid-littoral. Larvae were sampled at six points using horizontal trawls of the surface water. The sampling points represent the inner and outer estuary, its two margins, and varying gradients of salinity. The density of the zoea I and adults were higher on the margins with the highest sediment deposition rates and salinity. Only the density of the adults correlated significantly with salinity. Although ovigerous females were only collected in the rainiest periods, the presence of juveniles throughout the year indicates that the species reproduces continuously. The population parameters indicate that the density of P. gracilis was related to salinity, and that part of the life cycle of these crabs is completed in the Marapanim estuary. This species reproduces in the estuary, exports zoea I to the coastal waters and then probably returns as megalopae, responding to local conditions through systematic shifts in its distribution and abundance over time and space. The population was relatively stable and able to adjust to the considerable variation in abiotic factors that are typical of this estuary.

Highlights

  • Variation in the abundance and spatial distribution of a species permit the adjustment of population traits to the characteristics of the environment (Gerhart and Bert, 2008; Almeida et al, 2010)

  • The objective of the present study is to investigate the spatio-temporal variation and density of P. gracilis adults and larvae in a tropical Amazonian estuary, including the description of the population structure of the species in order to test the hypothesis of greater density of this species in the high estuary, with continuous reproduction and presence of larvae and adults throughout the year

  • Despite the fact that ovigerous females were only collected during the rainy season, probably due to the rather small sample sizes, zoea I and juveniles were observed throughout the year, indicating that reproduction is continuous in the Marapanim estuary, as observed in most other tropical (Hartnoll, 2006; Bessa et al, 2010) and subtropical (Peiró and Mantelatto, 2011) crab species, with peaks of larval abundance between March and May, and August and December

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Summary

Introduction

Variation in the abundance and spatial distribution of a species permit the adjustment of population traits (such as growth, mortality, and reproduction) to the characteristics of the environment (Gerhart and Bert, 2008; Almeida et al, 2010). Crab populations may present distinct patterns of distribution within the coastal zone, which are affected by survival rates, body size, and sex or age (Menendez, 1987; Cannicci et al, 1999; Almeida et al, 2008). Salinity is one of the principal factors influencing the distribution of brachyurans in estuaries, and the success of the population of a given species will depend on the extent to which its life stages are adapted to variations in salinity (Charmantier et al, 1998). Most grapsoid species are distributed in a variety of habitats in temperate and tropical seas, which accounts for the considerable versatility of their life cycle (Flores and Paula, 2002)

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