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First published online March 28, 2008
Journal of Experimental Biology 211, 1243-1248 (2008)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2008
doi: 10.1242/jeb.014977
To paddle or not: context dependent courtship display by male blue crabs, Callinectes sapidus
1 Department of Biology, Brains & Behavior Program, and Center for
Behavioral Neuroscience, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30302,
USA
2 Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, Charlottesville,
VA, USA
3 Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA,
USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: mkamio{at}gsu.edu)
Accepted 12 February 2008
| Summary |
|---|
|
|
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Key words: habitat-dependent signalling, courtship display, chemical communication, chemoreception, pheromone, sexual behaviour, portunid, blue crab, Callinectes sapidus
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Courtship display of male blue crabs
Male blue crabs Callinectes sapidus Rathbun produce a distinctive
courtship display behaviour when they smell a pubertal female. A pheromone,
which is currently not chemically characterised but is present in the pubertal
female's urine, is detected by sensors in the aesthetasc sensilla on the
antennules of males (Gleeson,
1980
; Gleeson,
1982
; Gleeson,
1991
). Some components of this courtship display of blue crabs are
also part of the display of most other portunid crabs, including spreading
their chelae and extending their walking legs to elevate the body high off the
bottom (Ryan, 1966
;
Fielder and Eales, 1972
;
Berrill and Arsenault, 1982
).
An additional component of the male courtship display, unique to C.
sapidus and one other portunid crab, the lesser blue crab Callinectes
similis, is paddling of its swimming legs, or fifth pereiopods
(Teytaud, 1971
;
Gleeson, 1991
;
Wood and Derby, 1995
) (M.K.,
personal observation).
Courtship paddling by male blue crabs has been described in several studies
(Teytaud, 1971
;
Gleeson, 1980
;
Gleeson, 1991
;
Wood and Derby, 1995
;
Jivoff and Hines, 1998
;
Bushmann, 1999
). The definition
of paddling display that we use in this paper follows Teytaud's original
definition, with some modifications. According to our definition, courtship
paddling involves raising the swimming legs vertically over the carapace,
turning them so that the flat side of the paddle blade faces anteriorly to
push water forward and then moving them from side to side (Movies 1A and B in
supplementary material). This paddling is always preceded by and combined with
a chelae spread, and the body is always highly elevated. In addition to the
side-to-side movement, the blade moves from outside to inside and backward to
forward to make a circular motion. In this movement, the left and right
paddles are 180 degrees out of phase, as described by Wood and Derby
(Wood and Derby, 1995
). Our
observations show that when performing courtship paddling, crabs do not move
or walk. When the male walks between bouts of courtship paddling, he changes
the type of paddling in order to keep his balance. The paddling during walking
differs from courtship paddling in that in paddling during walking, the two
legs do not move in tight synchrony (whereas in courtship paddling, the
paddles move in antiphasic synchrony), the paddles are positioned more
laterally (compared to a more medial-dorsal position during stationary
courtship paddling) and the paddle blade faces are held in a sideward or
downward position (rather than the flat side of the blade facing anteriorly in
courtship stationary paddling) (Movie 2 in supplementary material). Thus we
call the courtship paddling behaviour `courtship stationary paddling' to
distinguish it from the other types of paddling.
Courtship stationary paddling probably delivers a multimodal signal to
females. A visual signal is indicated by the observation of Teytaud
(Teytaud, 1971
) that sexually
receptive female crabs respond to a model of male crabs in a stationary
posture (Teytaud, 1971
). Blue
crabs can distinguish blue from other colours
(Bursey, 1984
), suggesting that
the chelae spread may be a visual display. The paddling component of the
display makes a characteristic and conspicuous visual stimulus and thus it
might contribute as a visual courtship signal, but this has not been tested.
In addition to a visual signalling component, the courtship display may create
chemical and mechanical signals to the female. During paddling, the volume of
water pumped out of the gill chambers increases
(Gleeson, 1991
) and paddling
generates a strong current projected forward from the male
(Wood and Derby, 1995
;
Jivoff and Hines, 1998
) (M.K.,
personal observation). This water flow may be a significant communication
signal by indicating physical proximity of the male to the female and by
transporting chemical information to the female
(Gleeson, 1991
;
Jivoff and Hines, 1998
). Male
blue crabs release a chemical signal that attracts females
(Gleeson, 1991
). Thus,
courtship stationary paddling potentially contains visual, chemical and
mechanical signals.
Although described by many researchers, courtship paddling is not commonly
observed in male crabs in the laboratory, even to stimulation with female
pheromone. For example, Wood and Derby
(Wood and Derby, 1995
) used
eye ligation instead of stimulation by female odour as a more reliable
releaser of courtship paddling. In addition, the courtship display, including
paddling, is not an essential prelude to successful precopulatory pair bonding
(Teytaud, 1971
;
Gleeson, 1991
;
Jivoff and Hines, 1998
;
Bushmann, 1999
). Male-male
competition is one factor that increases the frequency of courtship display,
and this has been demonstrated in blue crabs
(Jivoff and Hines, 1998
).
Levels of sexual conflict can also increase courtship behaviour
(Parker, 1979
). In general,
when females are more selective, less responsive, or more unwilling to mate,
males are likely to use their signals more frequently, at higher intensity or
for longer durations (Murai and Backwell,
2005
). However, blue crab males do more paddling to less choosy,
late premoult females (Jivoff and Hines,
1998
). This suggests that courtship stationary paddling has not
evolved mainly through female choice, since if females choose males based on
the display, males should display more to early premoult females.
Courtship paddling behaviour has been reported only in Callinectes sapidus, although Callinectes similis also produces it (M. K., personal observations). Other swimming portunid crabs have paddles but do not use courtship paddling. A possible explanation for why only C. sapidus and C. similis males show paddling display is that it may be an adaptation to their habitat. Blue crabs live in Spartina marshes where the water is turbid. Premoult females have low mobility and are susceptible to predators. According to this scenario, premoult females may hide in Spartina patches or in the substrate to avoid predators, and release sex pheromone from these shelters. Males might be able to detect the pheromone but be unable to locate or contact the females because they are inaccessible. Males would then have to attract the females from their refuge, and courtship stationary paddling would contribute to this by enhancing information transfer. According to this hypothesis, we made two predictions: (1) courtship stationary paddling creates powerful water currents directed towards the female, and (2) males produce more paddling when they detect the presence of a female but cannot access her.
As a test of this hypothesis, we created a physical barrier between male and female crabs and examined its effect on the incidence of courtship stationary paddling. We also visualised the water flow generated by the courtship paddling behaviour using particle imaging velocimetry, the first effort to visualise and quantify the water currents generated by courtship paddling.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Caging experiment
The same pair of male and female was used in both the accessible and
inaccessible conditions as described below, in random order. Twelve
male–female sets were used under both conditions, so we used a paired
test, the non-parametric sign test, to statistically analyse the data.
Inaccessible female condition: male behaviour toward females in a cage
This experiment was performed in a 122x63x76 cm fibreglass
aquarium equipped with flow-through natural sea water with a water depth of 40
cm and a salinity of 35 p.p.t. A second 50x25x20 cm plastic
aquarium was used, which had a plastic mesh lid on the 50x25 cm face.
Within this smaller aquarium, a late stage premoult female was added and the
entire aquarium was placed within one end of the larger aquarium, with the
mesh side facing the spacious end of the larger aquarium (Movie 3 in
supplementary material). A male crab was then introduced into the large
aquarium, allowing the male to see and smell but not touch or grab the female.
The male crab was videotaped for 30 min or until he performed full courtship
display with courtship stationary paddling.
Accessible female condition: male behaviour toward uncaged, walking females
This experimental setup was similar to the `inaccessible female condition'
except that the female was not in a cage and so could walk freely in the
aquarium. Thus the male could easily access, touch and grab the female. The
male and a female were introduced into the aquarium at opposing ends, and the
male was videotaped for 30 min or until the male and female formed a
precopulatory pair.
Visualisation of male-generated water currents using particle imaging velocimetry
Particle imaging velocimetry (PIV) was used to examine the water currents
generated by male crabs performing courtship stationary paddling. Data were
collected from a single male crab with a carapace width of 11.5 cm. The male
was placed in a 60x30x40 cm aquarium containing natural seawater
with no flow, and stimulated to produce courtship paddling by the addition of
100 µl of premoult female urine. Artemia eggs (40 ml dry volume)
with a mean diameter of 200 µm, were added to the water and used as
neutrally buoyant tracer particles. A 30 cm widex2 mm thick laser sheet
was generated using an array of three 7 mW laser diodes with a light emission
at 670 nm (World Star Tech, Toronto, ON, Canada; UH5-7G-670). Attached to each
laser was a 30° cylindrical beam expander to create the 2 mm thick light
sheet. The lasers were aligned horizontally along a plane and attached to an
adjustable ring stand so that the location of the laser sheet could be
adjusted vertically above the crab. The movement of particles was videotaped
from an angle of 90° to the plane of the laser using a Sony Handycam
DCR-DVD203. Video frames were divided into a series of jpg image files with a
framing rate of 30 Hz and image resolution of 720x480 pixels. Images
were processed using MatPIV 1.6.1 software written for Matlab®
(Sveen, 2004
) from a PIV
method developed by Cowen and Monismith
(Cowen and Monismith, 1997
).
This software divided each image frame into an array of `interrogation
sub-windows' and calculated the most probable displacements of particles in
successive pairs of frames using cross-correlation analysis. The final output
from the calculations produced a horizontal and vertical velocity estimate for
each 8x8 pixel sub-window, giving 89x59 velocity measurements
every image pair. For most experiments, individual paddling behaviour was
recorded for 5 s (150 images), during which time all the images were processed
and averaged to obtain mean velocity magnitude and direction.
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Chelae spread. Crab lifts and fully extends the chelae laterally, with the chelae closed (Movie 3 in supplementary material).
High on legs. Crab extends its legs and stands high (Movie 1B, Movie 3 in supplementary material).
Paddles up. Crab holds its fifth pereiopods (swimming legs) laterally behind the body with the swimming legs' paddle blades (dactylus) up (Movie 3 in supplementary material).
Courtship stationary paddling. Crab holds its swimming legs high
above its dorsal carapace and waves them side to side. The flat surface of
each dactylus faces forward. In addition to the side-to-side movement, the
paddle moves from outside to inside as it moves from backward to forward to
make a circular motion. The phase of circular motion of the left and right
paddles is 180° out-of-phase, as described by Wood and Derby
(Wood and Derby, 1995
). When a
crab performs this behaviour, it does not walk or move backward or forward,
and it always performs the chelae spread and high on legs behaviours (Movies
1A, 1B in supplementary material).
|
Cage pinch. Male crab walks to the cage and pinches the mesh to a degree sufficient to break the plastic material of the mesh (Movie 5 in supplementary material).
Cradle carry. Male crab moves his chelae inward from an extended position to physically enclose a female between them and position the female beneath him such that both crabs face in the same direction (Movie 6 in supplementary material).
Males in the presence of either accessible or inaccessible females showed courtship-related behaviours. However, the type of courtship-related behaviours under these two conditions differed. In the presence of accessible females, most male crabs (11 of 12) showed `cradle carry behaviour' whereas only one male showed `courtship stationary paddling' (Fig. 1). Males initiated cradle carry behaviour 1.2±0.9 min (mean ± s.d., with a range of 0.3–2.9 min) after initiation of the experiment. The single male that showed courtship stationary paddling initiated it after 2.2 min, it lasted for 2 s, and was immediately followed by cradle carry behaviour.
When in the presence of inaccessible females, males showed `chelae spread' while walking `high on legs'. Most males approached the caged female before the courtship stationary paddling: this was true for 8 of the 10 crabs that paddled (Fig. 2). Males first `cage touched' after 5.2±5.8 min, N=8. Of these crabs, 7 `cage pinched' after 7.9±5.1 min, N=5. Most males (10 of 12) showed `courtship stationary paddling', which was initiated 12.0±8.2 min, N=10 (range of 3.6–30 min) after the start of the experiment. The other two animals showed no courtship-related behaviours.
|
Flow visualisation experiment
Male crabs that were not performing the courtship stationary paddling
produced a `gill current' (Atema,
1986
). This current originating from the gill chamber was directed
upward, with a dominant flow direction 10° from vertical
(Fig. 3A). The maximum velocity
generated during this upward current was 0.6 cm s–1. Once a
male began courtship stationary paddling, a forward-directed current was
created that changed both the direction and magnitude of the water flow. The
paddling motion produced water currents by propelling water masses originating
from above and behind its body, through the gill current, and then outwards in
front of its body, parallel to the aquarium floor
(Fig. 3B,C). Averaged over 150
images (lasting 5 s), the mean velocity was measured to be 3.1 cm
s–1 for flow generated from the paddling behaviour, with peak
instantaneous velocities up to 17 cm s–1 near the paddles,
indicating intense paddling behaviour in the presence of a caged female. Not
only was the maximum velocity of the flow more than five times greater, but a
much larger volumetric flow was generated compared to that of the gill current
alone.
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Function of the paddling: generation of forward water current that facilitates bidirectional sexual communication
Our quantitative results with particle imaging velocimetry reveal that the
water current generated by courtship stationary paddling redirects water away
from the male toward the female at a mean velocity of 3.1 cm
s–1 (Fig. 3).
This water current could deliver both hydrodynamic and chemical information
from males to females, and this signalling is probably the main function of
the courtship stationary paddling. The speed of the water current might be
even faster than that described in our laboratory experiment, because crabs
can perform higher frequency paddling than that measured in this experiment,
even in the same laboratory conditions as used in this experiment (M.K. and
M.A.R., personal observation). The effective distance that water is
transported due to paddling is an important factor in evaluating the function
of this behaviour. Our PIV experiment was performed using a crab with a
carapace width of 11.5 cm in a 30x40 cm plane space. Because the size of
the aquarium limits the distance of the water flow, using either a larger
aquarium or larger males would likely yield currents of greater velocity that
could deliver the chemical stimulus to a greater distance away from the male
than was possible in our experiment.
Although pheromone release is less frequently reported for males compared
to females, male blue crabs release a pheromone that attracts pubertal females
(Gleeson, 1991
). Male
pheromones are also known in other decapod crustaceans
(Sato and Goshima, 2007
). We
speculate that bidirectional communication involving sex pheromones from both
sexes is more common in crustacean species than is currently known.
When does a male paddle?: when females are inaccessible
Our results show that a male crab produced courtship stationary paddling
only when there was a barrier between him and the female (Figs
1 and
2). When the female was caged
behind a barrier, a male first walked up to the cage toward the female and
attempted to break the barrier by ripping the mesh of the cage or the cage
itself, and only after attempting to move beyond the barrier for some time did
the male finally begin courtship stationary paddling. These results indicate
that courtship stationary paddling is not the behaviour of first choice for a
male attempting to form a precopulatory pair. This conspicuous and active
courtship stationary paddling is a vigorous behaviour that makes the male more
obvious to predators, and thus is likely to be energetically costly and to
increase the risk of being attacked by a predator, as is the case for many
other courtship display behaviours
(Andersson, 1994
). This
explains why courtship stationary paddling is not common in male crabs in the
laboratory, i.e. males should not perform courtship stationary paddling unless
they encounter a barrier preventing access to females.
Why do they paddle?: adaptation to their habitat
Our results are consistent with a habitat adaptation hypothesis for the
evolution of this courtship display. According to this idea, reproductive
females, either in the premoult pubertal stage or the immediate postmoult
mature stage, are vulnerable to predators. Sea turtles, sharks, rays,
alligators, birds and fish are predators of blue crabs
(Hines, 2007
). Their habitat
– Spartina marshes and shallow water with seagrass beds –
provides ample protective shelter in the grass and mud, as well as murky
water. Indeed, premoult crabs are typically captured by fishermen in the
Chesapeake Bay by dredging seagrass beds
(Hines, 2007
). These seagrass
refuges may allow females to avoid predators, and they also act as barriers to
males seeking females based on their odour. Males may be able to get close to
the pheromone-releasing female but may not be able to access the female to
initiate precopulatory guarding. When a male locates the female using its
chemical and visual senses but cannot access her, the male may initiate
courtship stationary paddling to deliver his pheromone to inform the female of
his location. Upon sensing his pheromone, the female may leave her refuge to
form a precopulatory pair with the male. This hypothesis is consistent with
the fact that late premolt females are prone to form precopulatory pairs
(Jivoff and Hines, 1998
) (and
others). The habitat adaptation hypothesis explains why only blue crabs and
lesser blue crabs show courtship stationary paddling but portunid species that
inhabit open ocean habitats do not. However, this hypothesis does not explain
why for species living in similar habitats with many refuges and low
visibility that result in inaccessible premolt females, the males do not show
stationary paddling. We speculate that other portunid species that live in a
habitat similar to blue crabs and lesser blue crabs may also perform courtship
stationary paddling.
Discrimination of courtship stationary paddling from the other forms of paddling
Walking forward while performing courtship paddling should be difficult
because paddling produces a forward current that generates a backward directed
force. In our experiments, males performing stationary paddling slipped
backward because of this backward directed force (Movie 7 in supplementary
material). Male crabs are reported to show falling back display
(Teytaud, 1971
) and/or jumping
back behaviour (Jivoff and Hines,
1998
) combined with paddling display. We observed such falling
back behaviour in our experiments (Movie 8 in supplementary material) but
interpret it to result from the backward directed force generated by paddling.
Jivoff and Hines (Jivoff and Hines,
1998
) reported that the rate of the paddle waving varies but often
increases as the displaying crab moves closer to another crab. Paddling is
typically combined with approach and chelae spread. Paddling while moving
forward was observed in our experiments; however, during moving forward, males
stopped stationary paddling for a short period or changed the type of paddling
(Movie 9 in supplementary material). Paddling during forward walking can thus
be distinguished from courtship stationary paddling. Jivoff and Hines
(Jivoff and Hines, 1998
)
described that courtship paddling is typically combined with approach. This is
not consistent with our observations. One possible explanation is experimental
differences. In our experiments, crabs were in an aquarium with a flat and
smooth bottom with almost no substrate, and crabs may not have had secure
enough footing to make courtship stationary paddling during forward walking
without slipping and falling back. Another possibility is that courtship
stationary paddling was not distinguished from the other type of paddling in
Jivoff and Hines (Jivoff and Hines,
1998
).
Role of gill currents in courtship display
In American lobsters and crayfish, the gill current moves water forward and
away from the signaler, sending urine toward the opposite sex or opponent
(Atema, 1986
;
Breithaupt and Eger, 2002
). In
our experiments on blue crabs, the gill current projected upward and did not
make a large contribution to the forward-directed current. This can be one of
the reasons why blue crabs need courtship stationary paddling. However, many
kinds of water flow can be generated by fan organs, as reported in crayfish
(Breithaupt, 2001
). It is
possible that male blue crabs change the direction of gill current when they
start paddling.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
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