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Recognition of Dominance in the Big-Clawed Snapping Shrimp (Alpheus heterochaelis Say 1818) Part II: Analysis of Signal Modality
Ist Teil von
Marine and freshwater behaviour and physiology, 2003-03, Vol.36 (1), p.17-29
Ort / Verlag
Taylor & Francis Group
Erscheinungsjahr
2003
Quelle
Taylor & Francis
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Alpheus heterochaelis is able to recognise the dominance status of an opponent (see Part I of this series). A former loser does not fight against a former winner but rather escapes immediately after a contact. However, if a former loser meets an inexperienced opponent, the loser fights against it. Here we investigated the signal used for dominance recognition. Two groups of snapping shrimp that had lost a fight on Day 1, intact animals, and shrimp with cut lateral antennular filaments (i.e. without chemosensory aesthetascs), fought against the same winner on Day 2. Intact losers showed escape behaviour, while losers without aesthetascs showed almost the same aggressive behaviour as on Day 1. The main signal in dominance recognition is therefore a chemical one, possibly the urine or a substance carried by it. The main receptor organs for this signal are the lateral filaments of the antennules carrying the aesthetascs.