Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
M. Land, J. Layne (1995)
The visual control of behaviour in fiddler crabsJournal of Comparative Physiology A, 177
K. Bildstein, K. Bildstein, S. Mcdowell, I. Brisbin (1989)
Consequences of sexual dimorphism in sand fiddler crabs,Uca pugilator: differential vulnerability to avian predationAnimal Behaviour, 37
J. H. Christy (1987)
Female Choice and the Breeding Behavior of the Fiddler Crab Uca beebeiJ. Crust. Biol., 7
W. Cade (1975)
Acoustically Orienting Parasitoids: Fly Phonotaxis to Cricket SongScience, 190
M. Land, J. Layne (1995)
The visual control of behaviour in fiddler crabs. I. Resolution, thresholds and the role of the horizonJ. Comp. Physiol., 177
F. Vernberg (1975)
Physiological ecology of estuarine organisms
Claire Latruffe, P. McGregor, Rui Oliveira (1999)
Visual signalling and sexual selection in male fiddler crabs Uca tangeriMarine Ecology Progress Series, 189
T. W. Cronin (1988)
The visual pigments of crabsJ. Comp. Physiol., 162
S. Vehrencamp, J. Bradbury, R. Gibson (1989)
The energetic cost of display in male sage grouseAnimal Behaviour, 38
Heinrich-otto Hagen (1962)
Freilandstudien zur sexual und Fortpflanzungs-biologie von Uca tangeri in AndalusienZeitschrift für Morphologie und Ökologie der Tiere, 51
J. Bradbury, S. Vehrencamp (1998)
Principles of Animal Communication
I. Valiela, Daniel Babiec, W. Atherton, S. Seitzinger, C. Krebs (1974)
SOME CONSEQUENCES OF SEXUAL DIMORPHISM: FEEDING IN MALE AND FEMALE FIDDLER CRABS, UCA PUGNAX (SMITH).The Biological bulletin, 147 3
P. Backwell, P. O'Hara, J. Christy (1998)
Prey availability and selective foraging in shorebirdsAnimal Behaviour, 55
J. Endler (1992)
Signals, Signal Conditions, and the Direction of EvolutionThe American Naturalist, 139
H. Caravello, G. Cameron (1987)
The effects of sexual selection on the foraging behaviour of the Gulf Coast fiddler crab, Uca panaceaAnimal Behaviour, 35
R. Meldola
Sexual SelectionNature, 3
M. Rosenberg (1997)
Evolution of Shape Differences between the Major and Minor Chelipeds of Uca Pugnax (Decapoda: Ocypodidae)Journal of Crustacean Biology, 17
P. R. Y. Backwell (1996)
Crustaceana, 34
J. Christy (1987)
Female choice and the breeding behavior of the fiddler crab Uca beebeiJournal of Crustacean Biology, 7
D. Cummins, T. Goldsmith (2004)
Cellular identification of the violet receptor in the crayfish eyeJournal of comparative physiology, 142
Walter Clinton, B. Boeuf (1993)
Sexual Selection's Effects on Male Life History and the Pattern of Male MortalityEcology, 74
T. Morgan (1923)
The Development of Asymmetry in the Fiddler CrabThe American Naturalist, 57
P. Weygoldt (1977)
How Animals Communicate
S. Scott, M. Mote (1974)
Spectral sensitivity in some marine crustacea.Vision research, 14 8
D. Formanowicz, E. Brodie (1988)
Predation risk and forager escape tacticsAnimal Behaviour, 36
Muzammil Ahmed (1978)
Development of Asymmetry in the Fiddler Crab Uca Cumulanta Crane, 1943 (Decapoda Brachyura)Crustaceana, 34
J. Crane (1967)
Combat and its ritualization in Fiddler crabs (Ocypodidae) with special reference to Uca rapax (Smith)Zoologica : scientific contributions of the New York Zoological Society.
A. Bennett, I. Cuthill, K. Norris (1994)
Sexual Selection and the Mismeasure of ColorThe American Naturalist, 144
(1977)
Communication in crustaceans and arachnids
J. Crane (1975)
Ocypodidae, Genus Uca
M. Andersson (1994)
Sexual Selection
(1975)
Physiological and behavioural evidence for colour discrimination by fiddler crabs (Brachyura, Ocypodidade, genus Uca)
J. Crane (1967)
Zoologica, 52
J. Crane (1976)
Fiddler Crabs of the WorldEvolution, 30
J. Endler (1987)
Predation, light intensity and courtship behaviour in Poecilia reticulata (Pisces: Poeciliidae)Animal Behaviour, 35
Rui Oliveira, M. Custódio (1998)
Claw size, waving display and female choice in the european fiddler crab, Uca tangeriEthology Ecology & Evolution, 10
B. Ens, M. Klaassen, L. Zwarts (1993)
Flocking and feeding in the fiddler crab (UCA tangeri): Prey availability as risk-taking behaviourNetherlands Journal of Sea Research, 31
D. B. Dusenbery (1992)
Sensory Ecology
M. Salmon (1984)
The courtship, aggression and mating system of a “primitive” fiddler crab (Uca vocans: Ocypodidae)The Transactions of The Zoological Society of London, 37
C. Thurman (1990)
Adaptive Coloration in Texas Fiddler Crabs (Uca)
(1994)
Aspectos do comportamento das bocas-decavalete Uca tangeri (Eydoux), (Ocypodidae, Brachyura) no Parque Natural da Ria Formosa
Francis Martin, M. Mote (1982)
Color receptors in marine crustaceans: A second spectral class of retinular cell in the compound eyes ofCallinectes andCarcinusJournal of comparative physiology, 145
M. Murai, S. Goshima, Y. Nakasone (1983)
Adaptive droving behavior observed in the fiddler crab Uca vocans vocansMarine Biology, 76
W. Rhodes (1978)
Fiddler crabs of the world, ocypodidae: Genus Uca By Jocelyn Crane. Princeton University Press (1975). Pp. xxiii + 736. $75Animal Behaviour, 26
L. Leggett (1979)
A retinal substrate for colour discrimination in crabsJournal of comparative physiology, 133
J. Layne, M. Land, J. Zeil (1997)
Fiddler Crabs Use the Visual Horizon to Distinguish Predators from Conspecifics: A Review of the EvidenceJournal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 77
G. Hyatt (1977)
Field studies of size‐dependent changes in waving display and other behavior in the fiddler crab, Uca pugilator (brachyura, ocypodidae), 4
D. Franck (2000)
Sex, Color, and Mate Choice in GuppiesEthology, 106
A. Bennett, I. Cuthill (1994)
Ultraviolet vision in birds: What is its function?Vision Research, 34
R. Oliveira, J. Machado, J. Jordão, F. Burford, Claire Latruffe, P. McGregor (2000)
Human exploitation of male fiddler crab claws: behavioural consequences and implications for conservationAnimal Conservation, 3
J. Christy (1983)
Female choice in the resource-defense mating system of the sand fiddler crab, Uca pugilatorBehavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 12
E. Finger, D. Burkhardt (1994)
Biological aspects of bird colouration and avian colour vision including ultraviolet rangeVision Research, 34
M. S. Rosenberg (1997)
Evolution of Shape Differences between the Major and Minor Chelipeds of Uca pugnax (Decapoda: Ocypodidae)J. Crust. Biol., 17
J. Zeil, G. Nalbach, H. Nalbach (1986)
Eyes, eye stalks and the visual world of semi-terrestrial crabsJournal of Comparative Physiology A, 159
B. Greenspan (1980)
Male size and reproductive success in the communal courtship system of the fiddler crab Uca rapaxAnimal Behaviour, 28
(1988)
The visual pigments of crabs I. spectral characteristics
One of the possible costs of the male fiddler crabs enlarged claw can be conspicuousness to predators. This hypothesis was tested using human observers as a model of visual predators. In the European fiddler crab, Uca tangeri Eydoux, the males' major claw is white contrasting with the orange-brownish colour of the carapace and of the feeding claw, and the mudflat background. The following morphotypes were created from close-up photographs taken in nature using an image processing software: male, male without claw, female, female with enlarged claw, male with enlarged claw of the same colour of the feeding claw, male with 75% sized claw, male with 50% sized claw. These morphotypes were then presented in a randomised order to students, using a psychology test software, which allows the measurement of response time in msec. The subjects were allowed to look at the images for an unlimited amount of time, until they detected the individual or until they decided to pass on to another image. Backgrounds (i.e. mudflat picture) without individuals were also presented as a control. Male crabs were detected significantly sooner than females. When we compared males with the claw removed with females with an enlarged claw added, the pattern is reversed and the latter are detected significantly faster. Thus, the enlarged claw seems to be the key feature that makes the individuals more conspicuous. Size and colour seem to be the main aspects of the claw's conspicuousness. The data of these experiments support the initial prediction of males being more conspicuous than females because of their enlarged claw. The possible costs and benefits of this trait, related to predation, are discussed.
Hydrobiologia – Springer Journals
Published: Oct 16, 2004
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.