Leigh Marine Laboratory, University of Auckland, PO Box 349, Warkworth 0941, New Zealand.
Proc Biol Sci. 2012 Sep 7;279(1742):3622-31. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2012.0697. Epub 2012 Jun 6.
While sound is a useful cue for guiding the onshore orientation of larvae because it travels long distances underwater, it also has the potential to convey valuable information about the quality and type of the habitat at the source. Here, we provide, to our knowledge, the first evidence that settlement-stage coastal crab species can interpret and show a strong settlement and metamorphosis response to habitat-related differences in natural underwater sound. Laboratory- and field-based experiments demonstrated that time to metamorphosis in the settlement-stage larvae of common coastal crab species varied in response to different underwater sound signatures produced by different habitat types. The megalopae of five species of both temperate and tropical crabs showed a significant decrease in time to metamorphosis, when exposed to sound from their optimal settlement habitat type compared with other habitat types. These results indicate that sounds emanating from specific underwater habitats may play a major role in determining spatial patterns of recruitment in coastal crab species.
虽然声音是引导幼虫上岸的有用线索,因为它在水下传播得很远,但它也有可能传达有关栖息地质量和类型的有价值信息。在这里,我们提供了,据我们所知,第一个证据表明,定居阶段的沿海蟹类可以解释,并对与栖息地相关的自然水下声音差异表现出强烈的定居和变态反应。基于实验室和现场的实验表明,在定居阶段的常见沿海蟹类幼虫中,变态时间会因不同栖息地类型产生的不同水下声音特征而有所不同。与其他栖息地类型相比,当暴露于来自其最佳定居栖息地类型的声音时,五种温带和热带蟹的幼体变态时间显著缩短。这些结果表明,特定水下栖息地发出的声音可能在决定沿海蟹类的招募空间模式方面发挥重要作用。