Title of article :
Carbon and nitrogen balance of leaf-eating sesarmid crabs (Neoepisesarma versicolor) offered different food sources
Author/Authors :
Nalinee Thongtham، نويسنده , , Stein Erik Kristensen ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Carbon and nitrogen budgets for the leaf-eating crab, Neoepisesarma versicolor, were established for individuals living on pure
leaf diets. Crabs were fed fresh (green), senescent (yellow) and partly degraded (brown) leaves of the mangrove tree Rhizophora
apiculata. Ingestion, egestion and metabolic loss of carbon and nitrogen were determined from laboratory experiments. In addition,
bacterial abundance in various compartments of the crabs’ digestive tract was enumerated after dissection of live individuals.
Ingestion and egestion rates (in terms of dry weight) were highest, while the assimilation efficiency was poorest for crabs fed on
brown leaves. The low assimilation efficiency was more than counteracted by the high ingestion rate providing more carbon for
growth than for crabs fed green and yellow leaves. In any case, the results show that all types of leaves can provide adequate carbon
while nitrogen was insufficient to support both maintenance (yellow leaves) and growth (green, yellow and brown leaves). Leafeating
crabs must therefore obtain supplementary nitrogen by other means in order to meet their nitrogen requirement. Three
hypotheses were evaluated: (1) crabs supplement their diet with bacteria and benthic microalgae by ingesting own faeces and/or
selective grazing at the sediment surface; (2) assimilation of symbiotic nitrogen-fixing bacteria in the crabs’ own intestinal system;
and (3) nitrogen storage following occasional feeding on animal tissues (e.g. meiofauna and carcasses). It appears that hypothesis 1
is of limited importance for N. versicolor since faeces and sediment can only supply a minor fraction of the missing nitrogen due to
physical constraints on the amount of material the crabs can consume. Hypothesis 2 can be ruled out because tests showed no
nitrogen fixation activity in the intestinal system of N. versicolor. It is therefore likely that leaf-eating crabs provide most of their
nitrogen requirement from intracellular deposits following occasionally ingestion of animal tissue (hypothesis 3).
Keywords :
assimilation efficiency , Neoepisesarma versicolor , ingestion , sesarmid crab , defaecation , carbon and nitrogen budgets
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science