Abstract

Locomotor activity in the freshwater crab, Potamon fluviatile, was studied both in the field, by direct counts of animals along a stream section, and by means of actographs. General metabolism was evaluated through the analysis of oxygen consumption. Sex, size, and environmental factors proved to influence both the intensity and the timing of locomotion. In the laboratory, the two sexes behaved in the same way and consumed oxygen to the same extent, while the higher females' activity recorded in the field was due to their reproductive state. Younger age classes were more cryptic in the field and also less active in the laboratory, even though they had a higher weight-relative oxygen consumption. A rise in temperature, at least under the range examined in the present study, increased the crabs' activity rate, and also caused a change in their rhythmicity pattern, with a passage from diurnalism to nocturnalism. A lowering in relative humidity increased locomotion intensity, as a hygrokinetic response.

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