Department of Mathematics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill , United States ; Department of Integrative Biology, University of California , Berkeley , United States.
Department of Integrative Biology, University of California , Berkeley , United States ; Department of Biology, San Francisco State University , United States.
PeerJ. 2014 Aug 19;2:e535. doi: 10.7717/peerj.535. eCollection 2014.
Although many lineages of terrestrial crustaceans have poor olfactory capabilities, crabs in the family Coenobitidae, including the terrestrial hermit crabs in the genus Coenobita, are able to locate food and water using olfactory antennae (antennules) to capture odors from the surrounding air. Terrestrial hermit crabs begin their lives as small marine larvae and must find a suitable place to undergo metamorphosis into a juvenile form, which initiates their transition to land. Juveniles increase in size by more than an order of magnitude to reach adult size. Since odor capture is a process heavily dependent on the size and speed of the antennules and physical properties of the fluid, both the transition from water to air and the large increase in size during ontogeny could impact odor capture. In this study, we examine two species of terrestrial hermit crabs, Coenobita perlatus H. Milne-Edwards and Coenobita rugosus H. Milne-Edwards, to determine how the antennule morphometrics and kinematics of flicking change in comparison to body size during ontogeny, and how this scaling relationship could impact odor capture by using a simple model of mass transport in flow. Many features of the antennules, including the chemosensory sensilla, scaled allometrically with carapace width and increased slower than expected by isometry, resulting in relatively larger antennules on juvenile animals. Flicking speed scaled as expected with isometry. Our mass-transport model showed that allometric scaling of antennule morphometrics and kinematics leads to thinner boundary layers of attached fluid around the antennule during flicking and higher odorant capture rates as compared to antennules which scaled isometrically. There were no significant differences in morphometric or kinematic measurements between the two species.
尽管许多陆生甲壳动物的嗅觉能力较差,但 Coenobitidae 科的螃蟹,包括 Coenobita 属的陆生寄居蟹,能够利用嗅觉触角(触角)捕捉周围空气中的气味来定位食物和水源。陆生寄居蟹从小的海洋幼虫开始生活,必须找到一个合适的地方进行变态,进入幼体形态,从而开始向陆地过渡。幼体的体型增大了一个数量级以上,达到成年体型。由于气味捕捉是一个严重依赖触角大小和速度以及流体物理特性的过程,从水到空气的过渡以及个体发育过程中的体型大幅增加都可能影响气味捕捉。在这项研究中,我们研究了两种陆生寄居蟹,即 Coenobita perlatus H. Milne-Edwards 和 Coenobita rugosus H. Milne-Edwards,以确定触角形态和在个体发育过程中与体型相比的 flicking 运动学如何变化,以及这种缩放关系如何通过在流中使用简单的质量传输模型来影响气味捕捉。触角的许多特征,包括化学感觉感器,与甲壳宽度成比例地缩放,并以低于等比的速度增加,导致幼体动物的触角相对较大。 flicking 速度与等比缩放预期相符。我们的质量传输模型表明,触角形态和运动学的比例缩放导致在 flicking 期间围绕触角的附着流体的边界层变薄,并且与按比例缩放的触角相比,气味捕获率更高。这两个物种之间在形态或运动学测量方面没有显着差异。