Southern Ocean hydrothermal vents juxtapose two extremes - intense food-poor cold and scalding food-rich oases. At these vents, Marsh et al. (2015) found a community of Kiwa (Yeti) crabs that separated themselves along this gradient with the largest males sitting in hot, food-rich waters, while smaller males and females co-occur in an intermediate zone of warmth. However, as their eggs start to develop, females embark away from the vent to the food-poor yet stable cold of the Southern Ocean. This species has found an intriguing way to balance foraging risk and population persistence at the interface of hot and cold.
CITATION STYLE
Thurber, A. R. (2015, July 1). The crabs that live where hot and cold collide. Journal of Animal Ecology. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.12398
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