| Literature DB >> 31941480 |
Sebastian Steibl1, Christian Laforsch2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Coexistence is enabled by ecological differentiation of the co-occurring species. One possible mechanism thereby is resource partitioning, where each species utilizes a distinct subset of the most limited resource. This resource partitioning is difficult to investigate using empirical research in nature, as only few species are primarily limited by solely one resource, rather than a combination of multiple factors. One exception are the shell-dwelling hermit crabs, which are known to be limited under natural conditions and in suitable habitats primarily by the availability of gastropod shells. In the present study, we used two co-occurring terrestrial hermit crab species, Coenobita rugosus and C. perlatus, to investigate how resource partitioning is realized in nature and whether it could be a driver of coexistence.Entities:
Keywords: Coenobita perlatus; Coenobita rugosus; Coexistence; Competitive exclusion principle; Resource partitioning; Shell utilization
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31941480 PMCID: PMC6964008 DOI: 10.1186/s12898-019-0268-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ecol ISSN: 1472-6785 Impact factor: 2.964
Comparison of the shell utilization and preferences of the two co-occurring hermit crab species
| Utilized gastropod shells | 90 species (21 families) | 41 species (14 families) |
| Cerithiid shells utilized | 13.90% | 32.06% (***) |
| Cerithiid shells selected | 54.67% | 56.00% |
| Nassariid shells utilized | 28.78% | 18.49% |
| Nassariid shells selected | 64.00% | 65.33% |
| Naticid shells utilized | 14.09% | 4.22% (***) |
| Naticid shells selected | 56.00% | 20.00% (***) |
| Strombid shells utilized | 12.77% | 39.52% (***) |
| Strombid shells selected | 25.33% | 58.67% (***) |
| Shell diversity Shannon H | 3.644 | 3.039 |
| Niche width B in respect to shell species | 23.870 | 12.869 |
Asterisks (***p < 0.001) indicate significant differences in the proportional utilization or selection of the respective shell type between the two hermit crab species, C. rugosus and C. perlatus
Fig. 1The shell morphology of the four most utilized gastropod shell types. The principal component analysis is based on the five log-transformed morphometric parameters (AL aperture length, AW aperture width, L length, W width, WT weight). Each data point represents a single shell, colours resemble the different shell types
Comparison of the shell morphology of the four most utilized gastropod shell types and the two hermit crab species
| PC 1 | PC 2 | PC 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shell length | − 0.396 | 0.784 | 0.080 |
| Shell width | − 0.485 | − 0.265 | 0.016 |
| Aperture length | − 0.438 | − 0.078 | − 0.851 |
| Aperture width | − 0.437 | − 0.526 | 0.362 |
| Shell weight | − 0.472 | 0.174 | 0.370 |
| Shell thickness | − 0.329 | − 0.804 | 0.046 |
| Cerithiid shells | 0.874 (A) | 0.765 (A) | 0.372 (A) |
| Nassariid shells | 0.839 (A) | − 0.200 (B) | 0.268 (A) |
| Naticid shells | − 1.198 (B) | − 1.189 (C) | 0.056 (B) |
| Strombid shells | − 1.195 (B) | 0.384 (D) | − 0.791 (C) |
| 0.151 (A) | − 0.134 (A) | 0.046 (A) | |
| − 0.479 (B) | 0.424 (B) | − 0.146 (B) |
Principal components (PC) of the PCA are based on five morphometric parameters of the four utilized gastropod shell types. Significant differences between the mean PC values for each shell type are indicated by different letters behind the PC value, same letters indicate no statistical difference between the PC values of the respective shell types
Fig. 2The two co-occurring hermit crab species and the four most commonly utilized gastropod shell types. On the top, the two tested hermit crab species, Coenobita rugosus (a) and C. perlatus (b) and below the four different shell types utilized, i.e. nassariid (c; here depicted: Nassarius variciferus), naticid (d; here depicted Polinices mammilla), cerithiid (e; here depicted Rhinoclavis aspera) and strombid shells (f; here depicted Gibberulus gibberulus)