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SPACING MECHANISMS IN A HERMIT CRAB POPULATIONSnyder-Conn, Elaine Kay, 1948- January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
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Shell selection behavior of the hermit crab, pagurus longicarpus /Giannelli, Julie M., January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Central Connecticut State University, 2004. / Thesis advisor: Jeremiah Jarrett. " ... in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Biological Sciences." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 17-20). Also available via the World Wide Web.
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A tidal rhythm in the Gulf of California hermit crab, Clibanarius digueti (Bouvier)Snyder, Elaine Kay, 1948- January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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Optimisation in the life history of the hermit crab Pagurus bernhardus (L.)Lancaster, Ian January 1988 (has links)
Aspects of the ecology of Pagurus bernhardus are examined and the strategies which enable this species to exploit two quite different habitats are determined. The area of shell selection is reviewed and mathematical indices of shell adequacy are rejected as biologically flawed. A subjective index is proposed to more accurately describe the quality of a hermit crab shell resource. Shell preference is considered to be an artificial phenomenon and shell selection is demonstrated to be an essentially random process. Shell-limitation is considered one of the most common problems facing all populations of hermit crabs, detrimentally affecting growth, fecundity, and longevity. The reproductive cycle of Pagurus bernhardus is examined, and the period spent in the littoral zone is considered critical in the life history. Breeding is shown to occur only during the winter months in littoral populations, and is shown to require two interacting stimuli. Low temperatures affect egg production in the female; while reduced photoperiods affect breeding behaviour in the male. Gestation is shown to require some 43 days at temperatures of 8-10°c, and most females will produce two broods during a breeding season. Females are sexually mature in their first year and precocious breeding is seen as a vital strategy to overcome the restrictions of shell-limitation. The monitoring of marked individuals indicates that Pagurus bernhardus is not territorial, and that the distribution of individuals on a shore is essentially random. The patterns of movement, the non-breeding interactions between individuals, and the residence times of these animals on a shore are suggested to be most strongly influenced by the quantity and quality of their shell contacts. Migration into the sublittoral is seen as an inevitable consequence of this behaviour.
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The effects of forest management and food availability on the ecophysiology of pre-breeding and breeding hermit thrushes (Catharus guttatus) /Johnston, Jason Clarence, January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.) in Biological Sciences--University of Maine, 2007. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 146-164).
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The Effects of Forest Management and Food Availability on the Ecophysiology of Pre-Breeding and Breeding Hermit Thrushes (Catharus guttatus)Johnston, Jason Clarence January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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HERMIT CRAB POPULATION STRUCTURE AND ASSOCIATION WITH GASTROPOD SHELLS IN THE NORTHERN BERING SEAPeura, Jennifer Frances 01 August 2013 (has links)
Most models of the impacts of climate change on the distributions of animals have focused on limits to thermal tolerances of individual species. Such "bioclimatic envelope" models do not consider the importance of interactions among species, each of which may respond to climate change in its own way. Hermit crabs (Paguridae) cannot exist without shells produced by gastropods. Thus, their ranges are expected to depend not only on their own physiological tolerances, but also on tolerances of gastropod species that produce shells of suitable sizes for growing crabs that use successively larger shells. To assess their potential importance to range shifts of hermit crabs, I characterized these commensal relationships over a large area of the northern Bering Sea in May to early June. Of 1539 hermit crabs collected, Pagurus rathbuni comprised 55%, P. trigonocheirus 44%, and Labidochirus splendescens 1%, with only four individuals of three other Pagurus species. Species richness for all living gastropods in my study area was 26 species, of which 18 were used by hermit crabs. P. rathbuni used shells of mostly moon snails (Naticidae); only 7 to 19% used whelk shells (Buccinidae) in the first four size classes, and 34% in the largest size class. P. trigonocheirus also used shells of mainly moon snails, but its use of whelk shells ranged from 18 to 44% in the first four size classes, and 70% in the largest size class. Densities of P. rathbuni and P. trigonocheirus varied independently of each other (r2 = 0.08, p = 0.09, N = 36 stations). Other studies suggest that hermit crabs obtain most of their shells from gastropods that have recently died, and that such empty shells are available for a relatively short period before being buried in sediments; thus, available shells should resemble the local pool among living gastropods. Correlation of P. rathbuni densities with densities of living gastropods with suitable shells was weak (r2 = 0.18, p < 0.01, N = 36 stations), while there was no correlation for P. trigonocheirus (r2 < 0.01, p = 0.59). Density patterns of hermit crabs within the five size classes did not correspond to those of living gastropods with suitable shells (randomization tests of independence, all p < 0.002). These results suggest that in the northern Bering Sea, initial effects of climate change on hermit crab distributions will depend more strongly on factors other than concurrent effects on dispersion of gastropods.
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Resource utilization and reproduction of the hermit crab Clibanarius virescens (Crustacea: Decapoda : Anomura)Wait, Michelle Unknown Date (has links)
Clibanarius virescens (Krauss) is a common and abundant hermit crab along the East coast of South Africa. Despite this, its biology is poorly known, both in South Africa and throughout the rest of its range in the West Indo-Pacific region. This study focuses on the descriptive analysis of the shell resource used by C. virescens and of the effects of this resource on crab populations. The underlying hypothesis of the study is that biogeographically imposed gradients in the morphology of intertidal gastropod shells used by hermit crabs affect hermit crab population parameters. The gradient of potential change in the shell resource was captured by sampling at 12 localities, encompassing the range of C. virescens in South Africa. Seasonal changes in shell use, population structure and reproduction at a single locality (Cape Recife) were recorded over a period of 13 months. The breeding season of C. virescens at the southern extreme of its range extended from December to June. The population structure shows some seasonal change, but no clear trends emerge. The shell resource changed substantially in nature over the region studied. Based on shell use, localities clustered into separate southern and northern groups with a break occurring between Dwesa and Coffee Bay. Southern localities were characterised by use of Burnupena cincta, B. lagenaria and B. pubescens. Northern localities were characterised by the use of Morula granulata, M. nodosa and Peristernia forskalii. Intertidal shells used by C. virescens show fewer adaptations to predation in southern localities than shells from northern localities. Southern shells ii are relatively large, light and have wider apertures than those from northern localities which are generally smaller, heavier and have decreased aperture widths. Shell parameters affect population size-distributions as southern crabs were larger and heavier than northern crabs. C. virescens show sexual size dimorphism in which male crabs uniformly dominate the larger size classes at all localities. Differences in the sex ratio between males and females show more variable patterns. Most southern localities show no difference in the number of male and female crabs, but most northern localities show a skewed sex ratio in favour of females. Shell use and population size distributions of females affect reproductive output. Southern females produced significantly larger clutches than northern females. Reproductive output was related to crab mass and shell volume. Shell use patterns conform to the biogeographical regions in the range of the study and have a clear effect on both the population size distributions and reproductive output of Clibanarius virescens.
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RECEPTOR MECHANISMS IN THE ANTENNAE OF THE HERMIT CRAB, PETROCHIRUS CALIFORNIENSISTaylor, Robert Clement, 1935- January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
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Behavioral and ecological tests of four models explaining narrow hybrid zones between hermit and Townsend's warblers /Pearson, Scott F. January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1997. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [100]-113).
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