Both body size and habitat architecture have pervasive effects on the form, function, and interactions of organisms, and can play especially important roles in structuring intimate associations between host organisms and their obligate associates. In this study, we examined how body size is related to host use in a diverse clade of closely related snapping shrimp species (Synalpheus) that live in the interior canals of sponges. Using data from an extensive survey of sponge-dwelling Synalpheus from Jamaica, we tested how sponge morphology (interior canal size and individual sponge volume) was related to the identity and diversity of Synalpheus inhabitants. In cross-species comparisons, we found a strong positive correlation between Synalpheu...
Alpheid snapping shrimp are one of the most diverse groups of coral-reef fauna, and sponge-dwelling ...
Morphometric differences in the optical morphology of symbiotic palaemonid shrimps can be observed a...
Eusocial societies are defined by a reproductive division of labour between breeders and nonbreeders...
Both body size and habitat architecture have pervasive effects on the form, function, and interactio...
Microevolutionary studies and natural history suggest that host-specialization has promoted the high...
Microevolutionary studies and natural history suggest that host-specialization has promoted the high...
Marine sponges are frequently inhabited by a wide range of associated invertebrates, including carid...
Alpheid shrimp represent an abundant and diverse, but poorly characterized, component of the cryptic...
Recently, the Caribbean snapping shrimp Synalpheus regalis was shown to be eusocial by the criteria ...
Small marine decapods often associatewith other invertebrates in order to gain protection frompredat...
Abstract In symbiotic crustaceans, host-use patterns vary broadly. Some species inhabit host individ...
Eusocial societies present a Darwinian paradox, yet they have evolved independently in insects, mole...
Divergent natural selection driven by competition for limited resources can promote speciation, even...
Sessile communities provide an ideal opportunity to understand how population interactions are struc...
Alpheid shrimp represent an abundant and diverse, but poorly characterized, component of the cryptic...
Alpheid snapping shrimp are one of the most diverse groups of coral-reef fauna, and sponge-dwelling ...
Morphometric differences in the optical morphology of symbiotic palaemonid shrimps can be observed a...
Eusocial societies are defined by a reproductive division of labour between breeders and nonbreeders...
Both body size and habitat architecture have pervasive effects on the form, function, and interactio...
Microevolutionary studies and natural history suggest that host-specialization has promoted the high...
Microevolutionary studies and natural history suggest that host-specialization has promoted the high...
Marine sponges are frequently inhabited by a wide range of associated invertebrates, including carid...
Alpheid shrimp represent an abundant and diverse, but poorly characterized, component of the cryptic...
Recently, the Caribbean snapping shrimp Synalpheus regalis was shown to be eusocial by the criteria ...
Small marine decapods often associatewith other invertebrates in order to gain protection frompredat...
Abstract In symbiotic crustaceans, host-use patterns vary broadly. Some species inhabit host individ...
Eusocial societies present a Darwinian paradox, yet they have evolved independently in insects, mole...
Divergent natural selection driven by competition for limited resources can promote speciation, even...
Sessile communities provide an ideal opportunity to understand how population interactions are struc...
Alpheid shrimp represent an abundant and diverse, but poorly characterized, component of the cryptic...
Alpheid snapping shrimp are one of the most diverse groups of coral-reef fauna, and sponge-dwelling ...
Morphometric differences in the optical morphology of symbiotic palaemonid shrimps can be observed a...
Eusocial societies are defined by a reproductive division of labour between breeders and nonbreeders...