Comparative biology of the crab Goniopsis cruentata: geographic variation of body size, sexual maturity, and allometric growth

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Abstract

Geographic variation of phenotypic traits is common across species and is often associated with variation in environmental conditions. Here, we found larger bodies and larger size at maturity in a northward, lower latitude population of the crab Goniopsis cruentata, which inhabits a hotter, drier environment in comparison with a southward, higher latitude population. Furthermore, the juvenile male gonopods grow more relative to body size in the population characterized by maturation at a smaller size. In contrast, the female abdomen widens at a higher rate among the late maturing population. These results provide further evidence that local environmental conditions play a role in phenotypic variation between populations inhabiting different latitudes. Moreover, they also show that variation in size at maturity and body size can lead to divergent allometric patterns of sexual characteristics that can have a sex-specific response.

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de Lira, J. J. P. R., Calado, T. C. dos S., Rezende, C. F., & Silva, J. R. F. (2015). Comparative biology of the crab Goniopsis cruentata: geographic variation of body size, sexual maturity, and allometric growth. Helgoland Marine Research, 69(4), 335–342. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10152-015-0441-8

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