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Effects of visual and chemical cues on orientation behavior of the Red Sea hermit crab Clibanarius signatus
Author(s) -
Tarek G. Ismail
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of basic and applied zoology /journal of basic and applied zoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-9896
pISSN - 2090-990X
DOI - 10.1016/j.jobaz.2012.02.004
Subject(s) - hermit crab , predator , attraction , odor , sensory cue , orientation (vector space) , psychology , biology , ecology , cognitive psychology , geometry , predation , neuroscience , crustacean , decapoda , mathematics , linguistics , philosophy
Directional orientation of Clibanarius signatus toward different targets of gastropod shells was studied in a circular arena upon exposure to background seawater, calcium concentrations and predatory odor. Directional orientation was absent when crabs were presented with the white background alone. Each shell was tested in different positions (e.g., anterior, posterior, upside-down, lateral). Adult crabs were tested without their gastropod shells, and orientation varied with concentration and chemical cue. With calcium, orientation increased as concentration increased up to a maximum attraction percentage and then attraction became stable. In the case of predator cues, some individuals swim away from the target toward the opposite direction representing a predator avoidance response. Whenever, the blind hermit crab C. signatus was exposed to a shell target combined with calcium or predator cues, the majority of them stop moving or move in circles around the arena center. The others exhibited uniform orientation distribution. The responsiveness was higher with calcium cues than predator cues. Thus in the absence of vision, individual hermit crabs were able to detect both calcium and predator cues and have different response regarding them

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