Clark H L, Backwell P R Y
Research School of Biology , The Australian National University , Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 0200 , Australia.
R Soc Open Sci. 2017 Jan 18;4(1):160621. doi: 10.1098/rsos.160621. eCollection 2017 Jan.
Many species worldwide are impacted by habitat loss. This may result in increased competition both within species and between species. Many studies have demonstrated that when two previously non-overlapping species are forced to compete over a resource, one species is likely to become dominant over the other. This study explores the impact a larger species of fiddler crab (-previously known as ) has when invading an area previously used solely by a smaller species (-previously known as ). Here we show that, while there are some detrimental effects of living next to a heterospecific, they are relatively minor. New heterospecific neighbours fight more regularly with resident crabs, but each fight is no longer or more escalated than those between the resident and a new conspecific male. The residents are not specifically targeted by intruding heterospecifics, thus, given the large advantage of having a heterospecific neighbour in terms of lowered competition for females, the overall impact of species mixing is probably not as negative as might have been predicted.
全球许多物种都受到栖息地丧失的影响。这可能导致物种内部和物种之间的竞争加剧。许多研究表明,当两个先前不重叠的物种被迫争夺一种资源时,其中一个物种可能会比另一个物种占优势。本研究探讨了一种较大的招潮蟹(以前称为 )侵入一个以前仅由较小物种(以前称为 )使用的区域时所产生的影响。我们在此表明,虽然与异种相邻生活有一些不利影响,但相对较小。新的异种邻居与常驻螃蟹争斗得更频繁,但每次争斗并不比常驻螃蟹与新的同种雄性之间的争斗更持久或更激烈。常驻螃蟹不会被入侵的异种特别针对,因此,鉴于有一个异种邻居在降低对雌性的竞争方面具有很大优势,物种混合的总体影响可能不像预期的那么负面。