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Colour polymorphism and protective coloration in coconut crabs

Phenotypic colour polymorphisms are common in nature but their adaptive significance is often difficult to interpret. Terrestrial coconut crabs Birgus latro have cohabiting distinct red and blue colour morphs and earlier research suggested that red morphs are more cryptic in open inland areas whereas blue morphs are more cryptic in nearshore closed environments, hinting that microhabitat specialization maintains the polymorphism. We used five independent methods to investigate this hypothesis. (i) Behavioural observations of crabs in the wild, and (ii) behaviour of wild-caught crabs exploring an arena revealed no differences in habitat-specific movement patterns between morphs. (iii) An experiment with red and blue plasticine covered model crabs placed out in the field uncovered no consistent differences in visitation rates by terrestrial hermit crabs or live coconut crabs based on the colour of the plasticine. (iv …

Resource Details

Organization: Ethology Ecology & Evolution [Published by: Taylor & Francis]
Date: 2019-11-02
Resource Type: Publication, Resources
Topic: Climate Adaptation & Resilience, Conservation & Biodiversity

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