Laboratory measures of whole-animal performance are expected to correlate with morphological indices and success in activities that contribute to fitness. Males of the sand fiddler crab, Uca pugilator Bosc (Brachyura Ocipodidae), possess a single enlarged claw that is used in ritualized contests for possession of breeding burrows. Contests may escalate to pinching actions, suggesting claw closing force as a relevant performance indicator. When a claw is lost, it is regenerated. Within a western Atlantic salt marsh, regenerated claws are less massive and operate at reduced mechanical efficiency relative to original claws, suggesting a less powerful weapon. In the laboratory, the closing force of regenerated claws is less than that of origina...
Male fiddler crabs, genus Uca, have one greatly enlarged claw with which they court females and thre...
The capacity of certain animals to regrow a lost appendage has been exploited as a powerful tool to ...
Crab chelae are a model system for studying the relationship between the biomechanics of an organism...
Males of many species use signals during aggressive contests to communicate their fighting capacity....
Male sand fiddler crabs, Uca pugilator (Ocypodidae), possess a single enlarged claw that is used in ...
Autotomy and regrowth of a body part occurs in many animal species. It is costly to regrow the limb ...
Physical strength and resource value are two key determinants of fighting success in most species. W...
Current signaling theories predict that animal signals are generally honest, but each signaling syst...
Large male fiddler crabs sometimes help smaller neighbours to defend their territories against intru...
Many exaggerated morphological traits evolve under sexual selection. However, the optimal level of e...
1. Signals used during male combat are expected to be honest indicators of fighting ability. However...
Fiddler crabs are highly sexually dimorphic. Males possess one small (minor) feeding claw and one gr...
Autotomy is a predator escape mechanism in many taxa, including crustaceans. Male fiddler crabs auto...
Mimicry of females enables weaker males in many species to avoid intrasexual aggression. In fiddler ...
Animal contests occur in a large variety of taxa. The costs associated with fighting are present reg...
Male fiddler crabs, genus Uca, have one greatly enlarged claw with which they court females and thre...
The capacity of certain animals to regrow a lost appendage has been exploited as a powerful tool to ...
Crab chelae are a model system for studying the relationship between the biomechanics of an organism...
Males of many species use signals during aggressive contests to communicate their fighting capacity....
Male sand fiddler crabs, Uca pugilator (Ocypodidae), possess a single enlarged claw that is used in ...
Autotomy and regrowth of a body part occurs in many animal species. It is costly to regrow the limb ...
Physical strength and resource value are two key determinants of fighting success in most species. W...
Current signaling theories predict that animal signals are generally honest, but each signaling syst...
Large male fiddler crabs sometimes help smaller neighbours to defend their territories against intru...
Many exaggerated morphological traits evolve under sexual selection. However, the optimal level of e...
1. Signals used during male combat are expected to be honest indicators of fighting ability. However...
Fiddler crabs are highly sexually dimorphic. Males possess one small (minor) feeding claw and one gr...
Autotomy is a predator escape mechanism in many taxa, including crustaceans. Male fiddler crabs auto...
Mimicry of females enables weaker males in many species to avoid intrasexual aggression. In fiddler ...
Animal contests occur in a large variety of taxa. The costs associated with fighting are present reg...
Male fiddler crabs, genus Uca, have one greatly enlarged claw with which they court females and thre...
The capacity of certain animals to regrow a lost appendage has been exploited as a powerful tool to ...
Crab chelae are a model system for studying the relationship between the biomechanics of an organism...