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Reproduction of the fiddler crabsUca longisignalis andUca spinicarpa in a Gulf of Mexico salt marsh
Authors:Edmond C Mouton  Darryl L Felder
Institution:1. Department of Biology and Laboratory for Crustacean Research, University of Southwestern Louisiana, 70504-4651, Lafayette, Louisiana
Abstract:Monthly field sampling of active animals in a Louisiana coastal salt marsh monitored changes in size class frequency distributions, ovarian development of females, and rates of egg extrusion for two species ofUca endemic to the Gulf of Mexico. Ovigerous females occurred no earlier than February forUca spinicarpa and April forUca longisignalis. Peak percentages of ovigerous females were observed in June 1992 forUca longisignalis (67%) and in March 1993 forUca spinicarpa (85%). Peaks in ash-free dry weight (AFDW, in g) of females coincide with peak periods of ovarian development and subsequent ovigery. Mean biomass as AFDW of males and females combined forUca longisignalis was 0.26 g individual?1 and forUca spinicarpa was 0.17 g individual?1. A significant correlation existed between AFDW and carapace width in both species, males and females.U. longisignalis appears to be of warm-temperate lineage, and its reproductive activity is the more seasonally restricted, with later ovarian development, earliest egg laying delayed to late spring, and peak ovigery in summer. In keeping with putative tropical affinities ofUca spinicarpa, ovarian development is episodic over a longer-period from late winter to summer, and eggs are produced earlier in the year. The more striking seasonality in reproductive activity and biomass peaks forUca longisignalis may also reflect some nutritional dependency on temperate, annual marsh plants that characterize its preferred habitats.
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