z-logo
Premium
Experimental Change of the Orientation of Two Populations of T alitrus saltator ( C rustacea A mphipoda T alitridae) from C ap B on (North‐Eastern T unisia)
Author(s) -
El Gtari Mohamed,
Bourigua Nawzet,
Bouslama Mohamed Fadhel,
CharfiCheikhrouha Faouzia,
Scapini Felicita
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
ethology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.739
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1439-0310
pISSN - 0179-1613
DOI - 10.1111/eth.12289
Subject(s) - population , shore , orientation (vector space) , geography , ecology , biology , geometry , demography , fishery , mathematics , sociology
The orientation of sandhopper populations is adapted to the direction of the shoreline of the sandy beaches where they live; this behaviour was shown to be inherited in some M editerranean populations. The question was open whether this behaviour could be adaptively modified in case of changing shoreline or passive transfer to a new differently oriented shoreline. The C ap B on beaches in north‐eastern T unisia are particularly interesting because they belong to two different M editerranean B asins, the central and the eastern one, and their supra‐tidal populations do not come together. This work verified the effect of experimental change of the shoreline direction in two populations of T alitrus saltator from C ap B on (north‐eastern T unisia) through a displacement experiment. We transferred samples of T . saltator from two different localities ( K orba and R atiba) from their original beach to the familiar one and tested their solar and landscape orientation on the new beach that had an almost opposite direction with respect to the previous one. The comparisons of the results on the home beach and the new one confirmed the use of the solar compass in both populations, as well as the importance of landscape view and optical local sky factor in adjusting the escape direction. In both populations, an increase of scatter was observed on the new beach, especially when individuals could see the landscape. Also, a clear behavioural difference between the two populations was recorded, being R atiba population not significantly oriented to the shoreline when tested on the unfamiliar beach, while K orba population maintained its home direction also on the new beach.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here