Predicting diet in brachyuran crabs using external morphology

Author:

Quezada-Villa Katia1,Cannizzo Zachary J.2,Carver Jade1,Dunn Robert P.34ORCID,Fletcher Laura S.1,Kimball Matthew E.3,McMullin Ainslee L.1,Orocu Brenden1,Pfirrmann Bruce W.3,Pinkston Emily1,Reese Tanner C.1,Smith Nanette1,Stancil Carter1,Toscano Benjamin J.5,Griffen Blaine D.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, United States

2. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Office of National Marine Sanctuaries—National Marine Protected Areas Center, Washington DC, United States

3. Baruch Marine Field Laboratory, University of South Carolina, Georgetown, South Carolina, United States

4. North Inlet-Winyah Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve, Georgetown, South Carolina, United States

5. Department of Biology, Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, United States

Abstract

Morphological traits have often been used to predict diet and trophic position of species across many animal groups. Variation in gut size of closely related animals is known to be a good predictor of dietary habits. Species that are more herbivorous or that persist on low-quality diets often have larger stomachs than their carnivorous counterparts. This same pattern exists in crabs and in most species, individuals exhibit external markings on the dorsal side of their carapace that appear to align with the position and size of their gut. We hypothesized that these external markings could be used as an accurate estimate of the crab’s cardiac stomach size, allowing an approximation of crab dietary strategies without the need to sacrifice and dissect individual animals. We used literature values for mean diet and standardized external gut size markings taken from crab photographs across 50 species to show that percent herbivory in the diet increases non-linearly across species of brachyuran crab with the external estimate of gut size. We also used data from dissections in four species to show that external gut markings were positively correlated with gut sizes, though the strength of this correlation differed across species. We conclude that when rough approximations of diet quality such as percent herbivory will suffice, measuring external carapace markings in crabs presents a quick, free, non-lethal alternative to dissections. Our results also provide important insights into tradeoffs that occur in crab morphology and have implications for crab evolution.

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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