|A A A|

Detailed Reference Information

Detailed information for reference 17699

 Jensen, G.C., P.S. McDonald, and D.A. Armstrong (2002) East meets west: competitive interactions between green crab Carcinus maenas, and native and introduced shore crab Hemigrapsus spp. Marine Ecology Progress Series 225: 251–262.

 

Comment or Correction

Report a problem or comment on this reference.

Thank you!

Certification information

Reference not (yet) certified

Reference change log

No changes logged

Reference record internal details

Reference ID 17699
Reference type journalarticle
Authors Jensen, G.C.
McDonald, P.S.
Armstrong, D.A.
Publication Year (for display) 2002
Publication Year (for sorting) 2002
Title East meets west: competitive interactions between green crab _Carcinus maenas_, and native and introduced shore crab _Hemigrapsus _spp.
Secondary Title Marine Ecology Progress Series
Secondary Authors  
Tertiary Title  
Tertiary Authors  
Volume 225
Issue  
Pages 251–262
Place published  
Published  
Date  
URL
Abstract
ABSTRACT: The recent introduction of the European green crab Carcinus maenas and Asian shore crab Hemigrapsus sanguineus to the west and east coasts of North America, respectively, presents a unique opportunity for investigation into competitive dynamics among intertidal crabs. Juvenile C. maenas utilize rocks, shell, and other cover, and their arrival on the west coast places them in potential competition for these resources with an abundant native grapsid, H. oregonensis. Similarly, H. sanguineus use intertidal shelter on the east coast, thus placing C. maenas in possible competition with grapsids both as an invader on the west coast and as 'resident' on the east coast, having been established there for more than 150 yr. Field sampling and laboratory experiments testing competition for space between C. maenas and Hemigrapsus spp. of equal carapace width were conducted on both coasts, as were videotaped feeding trials to examine and quantify agonistic interactions between species. When competing for food (a single damaged, anchored bivalve), C. maenas dominated over H. oregonensis, while H. sanguineus were overwhelmingly dominant over C. maenas. Within-quadrat, stratified sampling of rocks and sand revealed striking differences in habitat utilization by C. maenas living in the presence or absence of Hemigrapsus. Only ~20% of juvenile C. maenas occurred under rocks in areas occupied by either Hemigrapsus species, while north of the present distribution of H. sanguineus (in Maine) >97% of the C. maenas were found beneath rocks. This pattern was reflected in laboratory trials as well, where both species of Hemigrapsus consistently dominated in contests for shelter. Given the importance of intertidal cover for small crabs, such competitive interactions will likely affect patterns of habitat use by C. maenas on the east coast and may have important implications for the ultimate distribution and impact of this species in the northeastern Pacific.
Keywords  
Remarks  
Reference Contributor Tag gpoore
Last Changed Wed Dec 5 10:57:43 2012

Creative Commons License Copyright NHMLAC    Design: Dean Pentcheff pentcheff@gmail.com