This study investigated whether asymmetries in both resource-holding potential (RHP) and resource value (RV) influence dominance and fighting behavior in the hermit crab Pagurus longicarpus. A total of 120 groups of three crabs were observed for 10 minutes in four experiments that tested all diverse combinations of equal/different RHP (i.e. ‘body size’) and equal/different RV (i.e. ‘shell size’ and ‘shell quality’). In a fifth experiment, dominant and subordinate individuals of the same size category (26 groups) were forced to enter shells of opposite quality than those previously occupied and then the behavior of the reconstituted original groups was observed for additional 10 minutes. As expected, crabs in lower quality shells were more willing to initiate and to escalate fights. However, their attacks were directed to any crab of the group, independently of the defender’s shell quality, and the fight duration did not vary with the different value of the resources at stake. This may indicate that P. longicarpus is unable to assess the quality of the shells available in its social environment but bases its tactical decisions during fights solely on its own resource. This suggestion was confirmed by the change observed in the fighting behavior of the crabs subject to the experimental alteration to their shell quality. This manipulation induced an overall increase in the intensity of aggression, the drastic modification of crab behavior, and the inversion of the hierarchy even though these crabs have had previous experiences of wins/losses and were familiar to the other members of the group. In this species, large crab size and/or the occupancy of adequate (and oversized) shells appeared to be the most likely determinant of contest resolution and individuals seemed to have a memory of the previously held resource, and behaved accordingly.

Fighting behavior in hermit crabs: the combined effect of resource-holding potential and resource value in Pagurus longicarpus / F. GHERARDI. - In: BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY. - ISSN 0340-5443. - STAMPA. - 59:(2006), pp. 500-510. [10.1007/s00265-005-0074-z]

Fighting behavior in hermit crabs: the combined effect of resource-holding potential and resource value in Pagurus longicarpus.

GHERARDI, FRANCESCA
2006

Abstract

This study investigated whether asymmetries in both resource-holding potential (RHP) and resource value (RV) influence dominance and fighting behavior in the hermit crab Pagurus longicarpus. A total of 120 groups of three crabs were observed for 10 minutes in four experiments that tested all diverse combinations of equal/different RHP (i.e. ‘body size’) and equal/different RV (i.e. ‘shell size’ and ‘shell quality’). In a fifth experiment, dominant and subordinate individuals of the same size category (26 groups) were forced to enter shells of opposite quality than those previously occupied and then the behavior of the reconstituted original groups was observed for additional 10 minutes. As expected, crabs in lower quality shells were more willing to initiate and to escalate fights. However, their attacks were directed to any crab of the group, independently of the defender’s shell quality, and the fight duration did not vary with the different value of the resources at stake. This may indicate that P. longicarpus is unable to assess the quality of the shells available in its social environment but bases its tactical decisions during fights solely on its own resource. This suggestion was confirmed by the change observed in the fighting behavior of the crabs subject to the experimental alteration to their shell quality. This manipulation induced an overall increase in the intensity of aggression, the drastic modification of crab behavior, and the inversion of the hierarchy even though these crabs have had previous experiences of wins/losses and were familiar to the other members of the group. In this species, large crab size and/or the occupancy of adequate (and oversized) shells appeared to be the most likely determinant of contest resolution and individuals seemed to have a memory of the previously held resource, and behaved accordingly.
2006
59
500
510
F. GHERARDI
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/210248
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