Author:
Innocenti Gianna,Pinter Noa,Galil Bella S
Abstract
The effects of the invasive rhizocephalan parasite Heterosaccus dollfusi on the agonistic behavior of the invasive swimming crab Charybdis longicollis were quantitatively analyzed under standardized conditions. The behavior of uninfected male crabs contained more aggressive elements than that of uninfected females. In encounters between infected males, markedly fewer and less aggressive elements were displayed than in encounters between uninfected males, whereas in encounters between infected females, more aggressive elements were displayed than in encounters between uninfected females. It is suggested that the presence of the parasite reduces belligerence in male crabs, possibly to avoid injury and to enhance the life expectancy of host and parasite.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics