Mictyris longicarpus

Mictyris longicarpus
Mictyris longicarpus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Crustacea
Class: Malacostraca
Order: Decapoda
Infraorder: Brachyura
Family: Mictyridae
Genus: Mictyris
Species: M. longicarpus
Binomial name
Mictyris longicarpus
Latreille, 1806 [1]

Mictyris longicarpus is a species of crab that lives on sandy beaches from the Bay of Bengal to Australia; with other members of the genus Mictyris, it is "one of the most loved crabs in Australia".[2] Adults are 25 mm (1 in) across, white, with blue on their backs, and hold their claws vertically. They feed on detritus in the sand, leaving rounded pellets of discarded sand behind them. The males may form into large "armies" which traverse the beach at low tide, before the crabs dig into the sand to wait for the next low tide.

Contents

Description

Mictyris longicarpus is nearly spherical, with an upright body.[3] Its carapace is powder blue, with the rest of the body being white except for purple patches on the joints of the legs.[3] The chelae (claws) are slim and curve downwards, and are held vertically in front of the crab.[3] Given the crab's upright posture, the eyestalks are short.[3] The body is up to 25 millimetres (1 in) across,[2] or "about the size of a cherry".[3]

Distribution

M. longicarpus is found from Singapore and the Bay of Bengal to New Caledonia and Australia, reaching as far south as Perth, Western Australia in the west,[4] and around the coast of Queensland and New South Wales to Wilsons Promontory, Victoria.[2]

Ecology

Examination of the gut contents of M. longicarpus showed that the crabs mostly feed on detritus, and any small organisms in the sand, such as diatoms, gastropod eggs or nematodes.[4]

Predators of adult M. longicarpus include Threskiornis spinicollis (the straw-necked ibis), Todiramphus chloris (the mangrove kingfisher), Egretta alba (the white crane), Tetractenos hamiltoni (the common toadfish) and Metopograpsus messor (a grapsid crab).[4] Juveniles are also attacked by the ghost crab Ocypode ceratophthalmus and the sand snail Conuber sordidus.[4]

Behaviour

Mictyris longicarpus spends much of the time buried in the sand. They emerge to the surface a few hours before low tide, although some individuals may remain submerged for the entire tidal cycle.[4] The first sign that a crab may emerge is the development of "hummocks" which appear on the surface of the sand and increase in size over a period of 10–30 minutes. The number of crabs which emerge is influenced by temperature, wind and rainfall, with the different sexes responding differently, such that one day, nearly all the emerged crabs will be male, while the next day, there may be a mixture of males and females.[4] Emergence of a population from the sand may take up to an hour, or be completed in five minutes, with the adults generally appearing before the juveniles.[4] Upon emergence, the crab performs "the most aerobatic grooming mechanism recorded from the Brachyura";[5] in less than a second, the crab falls onto its back, thus removing any sand it has accumulated on the carapace, and then flips upright again in a "half somersault".[5]

Initially, the crabs feed only tentatively, and within 15 minutes of emergence, they begin the "trek", where large numbers of crabs walk simultaneously towards the water in an almost straight line.[4] Mictyris are among the few crabs adapted to walking forwards, rather than sideways.[3] Juveniles only proceed about 50 yards towards the water, and feed at that level of the beach.[4]

An "army" of Mictyris longicarpus at Labrador, Queensland, Australia

Having reached a suitable moist area, the crabs begin to feed rapidly, working transversely across the beach as they do so. Feeding comprises raising scoops of sand to the mouthparts, with inedible material accumulating at the base of the third maxillipeds, and drop off the crabs as round pellets.[4] Feeding may last 1–2.5 hours, with the crabs spending less and less time feeding as they aggregate into armies.[4] The armies are generally composed solely of males, with the largest individuals at the front, probably because their longer legs mean they walk faster.[4] The army as a whole progresses at a speed of 10 yards per minute (0.34 mph or 0.55 km/h), continuing for 0.5–2 hours.[4]

Eventually, the army breaks up and the individual crabs travel up the shore, and dig themselves into the sand in a unique corkscrew motion.[4] The crabs dig down with the legs on one side of their body, while the legs on the other side walk backwards.[3] They then leave this burrow, and dig another. During this period, encounters between pairs of adult males result in both males adopting the threat display (rearing up onto the last one of two pairs of legs, and stretching the other limbs out as wide as possible), after which the loser – generally the smaller crab – backs down.[4] Eventually, the crabs remain in one of the burrows and await the next falling tide.[4]

Michael Tweedie considered crabs of the genera Mictyris and Scopimera to show types of behaviour also seen in human society. While Scopimera were caricatures of the middle class, Mictyris were "cheerful bohemians, living crowded together and out-doing in unrepressed and irresponsible behaviour even those human communities which aspire most strenuously towards this ideal".[3]

External links

Charybdis japonica.jpg Crustaceans portal

References

  1. ^ Peter K. L. Ng, Danièle Guinot & Peter J. F. Davie (2008). "Systema Brachyurorum: Part I. An annotated checklist of extant Brachyuran crabs of the world" (PDF). Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 17: 1–286. http://rmbr.nus.edu.sg/rbz/biblio/s17/s17rbz.pdf. 
  2. ^ a b c Gary C. B. Poore & Shane T. Ahyong (2004). "Mictyridae Dana, 1851". Marine decapod Crustacea of southern Australia: a guide to identification. CSIRO Publishing. pp. 487–489. ISBN 9780643069060. 
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Brian Morton & John Edward Morton (1983). "Protected flats". The sea shore ecology of Hong Kong. Hong Kong University Press. pp. 146–178. ISBN 9789622090279. 
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Ann M. Cameron (1966). "Some aspects of the behaviour of the soldier crab, Mictyris longicarpus". Pacific Science 20 (2): 224–234. http://hdl.handle.net/10125/7754. 
  5. ^ a b Jeff G. Holmquist (1989). "Grooming structure and function in some terrestrial Crustacea". In Bruce E. Felgenhauer, Les Watling & Anne B. Thistle. Functional morphology of feeding and grooming in Crustacea. Volume 6 of Crustacean issues. CRC Press. pp. 95–114. ISBN 9789061917779. 

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