Temperature-dependent feeding behavior in the brown box crab, Lopholithodes foraminatus

IntroductionGrowing fishing pressures and ocean warming are potential concerns for populations of brown box crabs, Lopholithodes foraminatus, at the southern end of their geographic distribution. In Southern California, brown box crabs are thought to occupy a broad depth gradient (intertidal zone -...

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Main Authors: Wave I. Moretto, Jennifer R. A. Taylor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2023.1241950/full
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author Wave I. Moretto
Jennifer R. A. Taylor
author_facet Wave I. Moretto
Jennifer R. A. Taylor
author_sort Wave I. Moretto
collection DOAJ
description IntroductionGrowing fishing pressures and ocean warming are potential concerns for populations of brown box crabs, Lopholithodes foraminatus, at the southern end of their geographic distribution. In Southern California, brown box crabs are thought to occupy a broad depth gradient (intertidal zone - 547 m), which exposes them to temperatures ranging from 8°C - 24°C. This large temperature span presents challenges for these ectothermic animals because the rates of their physiological processes, and ultimately their dietary needs, behavior, and health, vary with temperature. Here we examined how temperature affects the feeding behavior of brown box crabs to better understand their ecology in warmer regions of their distribution.MethodsAdult crabs were exposed to one of three temperature treatments (8°C, 15°C, and 20°C, N=10) for 2 months. Weekly throughout the exposure period, crabs were given two similar-sized prey items of different crushing strength (clam and mussel). Claw pinch force, prey preference, time to consume prey, and number of prey consumed were recorded prior to the start of the experiment and weekly for the duration of the study, with the exception of pinch force, which was recorded bi-weekly. We hypothesized that crabs will have a stronger pinch force at warmer temperatures, prefer prey items that require less breaking force at the coldest temperature, consume prey faster at warmer temperatures, and consume more prey at warmer temperatures.ResultsOur results confirm that pinch force is consistently greater at 15°C compared to 8°C, however, crabs at 8°C consumed more clams (higher strength) while those at 15°C consumed more mussels. Crabs at 8°C also consumed prey items faster than crabs at 15°C but ate a similar number of prey. Furthermore, there was 100% mortality at 20°C within 8 days of exposure, indicating their proximity to lethal limits within Southern California.DiscussionThese results show that brown box crab feeding behavior exhibits temperature thresholds, which may alter their nutritional state, community interactions, and distribution under both short-term and long-term changes in ocean temperature.
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spelling doaj.art-ffedc6fd635845bebb73f565eb5afb7b2023-09-08T12:08:49ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452023-09-011010.3389/fmars.2023.12419501241950Temperature-dependent feeding behavior in the brown box crab, Lopholithodes foraminatusWave I. MorettoJennifer R. A. TaylorIntroductionGrowing fishing pressures and ocean warming are potential concerns for populations of brown box crabs, Lopholithodes foraminatus, at the southern end of their geographic distribution. In Southern California, brown box crabs are thought to occupy a broad depth gradient (intertidal zone - 547 m), which exposes them to temperatures ranging from 8°C - 24°C. This large temperature span presents challenges for these ectothermic animals because the rates of their physiological processes, and ultimately their dietary needs, behavior, and health, vary with temperature. Here we examined how temperature affects the feeding behavior of brown box crabs to better understand their ecology in warmer regions of their distribution.MethodsAdult crabs were exposed to one of three temperature treatments (8°C, 15°C, and 20°C, N=10) for 2 months. Weekly throughout the exposure period, crabs were given two similar-sized prey items of different crushing strength (clam and mussel). Claw pinch force, prey preference, time to consume prey, and number of prey consumed were recorded prior to the start of the experiment and weekly for the duration of the study, with the exception of pinch force, which was recorded bi-weekly. We hypothesized that crabs will have a stronger pinch force at warmer temperatures, prefer prey items that require less breaking force at the coldest temperature, consume prey faster at warmer temperatures, and consume more prey at warmer temperatures.ResultsOur results confirm that pinch force is consistently greater at 15°C compared to 8°C, however, crabs at 8°C consumed more clams (higher strength) while those at 15°C consumed more mussels. Crabs at 8°C also consumed prey items faster than crabs at 15°C but ate a similar number of prey. Furthermore, there was 100% mortality at 20°C within 8 days of exposure, indicating their proximity to lethal limits within Southern California.DiscussionThese results show that brown box crab feeding behavior exhibits temperature thresholds, which may alter their nutritional state, community interactions, and distribution under both short-term and long-term changes in ocean temperature.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2023.1241950/fullcrustaceaecophysiologyfeeding ecologyfisheryocean warming
spellingShingle Wave I. Moretto
Jennifer R. A. Taylor
Temperature-dependent feeding behavior in the brown box crab, Lopholithodes foraminatus
Frontiers in Marine Science
crustacea
ecophysiology
feeding ecology
fishery
ocean warming
title Temperature-dependent feeding behavior in the brown box crab, Lopholithodes foraminatus
title_full Temperature-dependent feeding behavior in the brown box crab, Lopholithodes foraminatus
title_fullStr Temperature-dependent feeding behavior in the brown box crab, Lopholithodes foraminatus
title_full_unstemmed Temperature-dependent feeding behavior in the brown box crab, Lopholithodes foraminatus
title_short Temperature-dependent feeding behavior in the brown box crab, Lopholithodes foraminatus
title_sort temperature dependent feeding behavior in the brown box crab lopholithodes foraminatus
topic crustacea
ecophysiology
feeding ecology
fishery
ocean warming
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2023.1241950/full
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