Actas de congresos
Dwarfism in the coastal decapod assemblage of Robinson Crusoe Island, Chile: a predator-driven pattern?
Fecha
2012Institución
Resumen
Brachyuran decapod crustaceans (true crabs) are ecologically successful and usually an
economically important group in many coastal marine ecosystems. Cobble habitat
represents a common nursery and refuge for early benthic stages, as is true for many
small infauna. In the shallow subtidal of Robinson Crusoe Island (RCI) off Chile, the
cobble-dwelling decapod assemblage is similar in diversity, but conspicuously smaller in
body size than their counterparts on the Chilean continental coast (CCC), 700 km away.
Three of these species are shared between locations, yet the Island populations mature at
a smaller size and do not attain as great a maximum size as their mainland counterparts.
We explore the hypothesis that the difference in body size is related to contrasting levels
of predation pressure between RCI and CCC. RCI has a much greater diversity and
abundance of predatory fish than CCC. Cryptic coloration in island species, such as
Eurypanopeus crenatus, suggests another adaptation to high levels of fish predation.
Such contrasts of insular to continental systems provide an opportunity to test hypotheses
on the ecological factors driving the evolution of body size in this group. Funding:
FONDECYT 1080009, NatGeo/Waitt and NSF OCE-1039822.