Uca lactea, MUD-MOUNDS
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.26879/427 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B83987C9-FF8A-FF91-4E77-F9501659F9F2 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Uca lactea |
status |
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FORMATION OF UCA LACTEA MUD-MOUNDS View in CoL
Mode of formation of Uca lactea mud-mounds , their morphological variations with respect to high and low grounds, common association of mangroves and other associated biogenic activities have been closely studied with especial reference to sample area ( Figure 2.1-2 View FIGURE 2. 1 ).
Special Substrate Condition
Uca lactea mud-mounds are produced in a very special substrate condition that exists over a large area in the estuary bank where semi-rigid and fairly dry sand layers (a few cm to 20 cm thick as understood from shallow trenching) cover thick layers (few meters) of soft and water-rich mud ( Figure 1.3 View FIGURE 1. 1 ). This mud represents mudflat facies conspicuously developed along the Bay of Bengal coast, especially around estuary mouth areas ( De, 2009). Mud-mounds are produced when the depth of the mud layers subsurface is well within the penetration limit (about 20 cm) of the crabs as understood from random burrow casting.
Burrowing Process and Mud-Mound Formation
While burrowing vertically down they penetrate through the top sand layers and eventually reach subsurface moist mud layers. At the burrow base, due to lateral seepage of water, mud slur is produced that tends to accumulate within the burrow cavity. The burrowing crab with the help of its larger claw pushes up the mud slur that oozes out of burrow mouth in repeated pulses so as to form a conical mud-mound on the ground around the burrow opening. The burrow base water serves their purpose of frequent gill moistening for survival. Removal of mud slur keeps the tube unblocked and clear for easy dwelling and passage for the burrowing crab. The height as well as radius of the mud cone increase with repeated oozing out of mud slurs ( Figure 5.1-6 View FIGURE 5. 1-6 View FIGURE 6. 1 ). The position of the burrow opening is gradually raised so as to accommodate growth of mud-mound and keep burrow mouth clearly open on the surface.
A single conical mound with only one central burrow opening ( Figures 3.3 View FIGURE 3. 1-2 , 4.3 View FIGURE 4. 1 , 5.1 View FIGURE 5. 1-6 , 6.1 View FIGURE 6. 1 ) is referred to here as a simple mud-mound. Such mounds predominate in the elevated portions of the estuary bank ( Figures 2.1 View FIGURE 2. 1 , 6.1-4 View FIGURE 6. 1 ) and the central burrow is dwelled by a single crab. The outer surface of the cone becomes stepped and knobby ( Figure 5.4-6 View FIGURE 5. 1-6 View FIGURE 6. 1 ) suggesting repeated pulses of oozing out of mud slur. Mound surface with projected down mud tongues ( Figures 3.6 View FIGURE 3. 1-2 , 5.4 View FIGURE 5. 1-6 ) suggests higher water content of the internal mud slur. On the contrary, discrete mud lumps and even viscous mud road ( Figure 3.7-8 View FIGURE 3. 1-2 View FIGURE 4. 1 View FIGURE 5. 1-6 View FIGURE 6. 1 View FIGURE 7 View FIGURE 8. 1-2 ) are formed on mound heads where internal mud is more viscous and lower in water content. A compound mound is composed of a main mound, commonly the highest one, and several (three to five) lower sub-mounds around, each of which has a central open burrow opening ( Figures 3.4-5, 5.5-6, 6.5 View FIGURE 3. 1-2 View FIGURE 4. 1 View FIGURE 5. 1-6 View FIGURE 6. 1 -11). The burrow openings are close enough to amalgamate individual mounds into a compound mound ( Figure 6.6 View FIGURE 6. 1 - 10). Compound mounds are formed predominantly in low ground where population density is high ( Figures 2.1 View FIGURE 2. 1 , 6.5 View FIGURE 6. 1 -11) and are dwelled by several individuals of crab. Higher moistness of the subsurface mud layers in low grounds also contribute to the formation of compound mud-mounds.
The transformation of simple to compound mud-mounds as observed in the field is photographically illustrated in Figure 5.1-6 View FIGURE 5. 1-6 View FIGURE 6. 1 and the overall mechanism of mound formation is schematically explained in Figure 7 View FIGURE 7 . This transformation produces several transitional morphotypes, all having a conspicuous conical shape, made up of mud and a stepped or knobby outer surface with axial burrow tube(s) inside ( Figure 6.1 View FIGURE 6. 1 -12). Burrow casting ( Figure 3.1-2 View FIGURE 3. 1-2 ) and serial horizontal sectioning ( Figure 3.9 View FIGURE 3. 1-2 -11) of a mound suggest that the burrow shafts are discrete and not connected to each other subsurface, unlike the Uca marionis compound mud volcanoes reported from nearby area ( De, 2009). Active formation of mounds, simple or compound, is indicative of the presence of a burrowing crab inside. The mound building process changes a flat substrate to micro-mountainous or rugged topography ( Figure 6.1 View FIGURE 6. 1 -12) within a few days in the same way as the ocypodid Heloecius cordiformis ( Milne-Edwards, 1837) burrow-head mounds do in mangrove swamps near Sydney, Australia ( Warren and Underwood, 1986).
Influence of Tidal Action
During high tide the area remains inundated for a few hours and biogenic activity ceases completely. Just before inundation the burrow opening gets plugged by sediment collapse and a tubular air bubble is formed subsurface within which the crab takes shelter. This biophysical mechanism for intertidal quasiterrestrial crab burrowing is well explained by De (2005) from this region. On recession of water during low tide the substrate gets subaerially exposed for several hours, the burrowers come out of burrows and start biogenic activity afresh either by renovating the earlier domicile or by constructing a new one. Field observations (total six times) immediately after high tide suggest that about 5% to 10% of mounds collapse after each high tide forming shallow bowl shaped depressions ( Figure 8.1-2 View FIGURE 8. 1-2 ), mud lumps ( Figure 3.7 View FIGURE 3. 1-2 ), rolled-out mud balls ( Figure 8.3 View FIGURE 8. 1-2 ) and broken mud clasts ( Figure 4.2 View FIGURE 4. 1 ). During low tide new mounds were observed to be formed to compensate the loss of burrowing habitat. The crabs try to maintain a balance between loss of dwelling place during high tide and formation of new burrows during low tide.
The above observations were made during the winter month of December when sea (tidal range between 4 m to 5 m and centimetric wave amplitude in mud-mound region) and climatic (no rainfall, temperature range 19–28 ° C and wind velocity ~ 30 km /hour during day time as per Port Trust of India database) conditions remained fairly normal. Detailed characterization and replication of impacts of tide level due to climatic changes (e.g., during summer, monsoon and pre-monsoon storm events) on the mud-mound-building processes of Uca are important, but constitute altogether a different and much complex and wider aspect of neoichnological study, which is beyond the objectives of the present paper .
Influence of Ground Level
Micro-topographically the study area ( Figure 2.1-2 View FIGURE 2. 1 ) contains distinctive high and low grounds. The measured level difference between high and
PALAEO- ELECTRONICA.ORG low grounds varies between 10 and 20 cm. The low ground represents the base of small runnels or creeks flowing down into estuary water. A quantitative survey on mound heights and types (total 149 numbers; Figure 9 View FIGURE 9 ) across high and low grounds within the sample study area of about 300 sq m ( Figure 2.1 View FIGURE 2. 1 ) reveals that simple mounds dominate over compound mounds (105 vs. 8) in high grounds and vice versa in low grounds (30 compound vs. 6 simple mounds). The average population density of simple mounds in high ground is 2- 3/sq m area, while it is 7-9/sq m area for the compound mounds in low ground ( Figures 2.1 View FIGURE 2. 1 , 6.12 View FIGURE 6. 1 ). Moreover, average vertical height of simple mounds is always less than that of compound mounds irrespective of ground height (11 cm against 14 cm in low ground vs. 4 cm against 7.5 cm in high ground; Figure 9 View FIGURE 9 ). These readings also suggest that height of mounds, simple or compound, is greater in low ground ( Figures 2.1 View FIGURE 2. 1 , 6.12 View FIGURE 6. 1 ). In other words the volume of oozed out mud is more in low ground than that in high ground. This is explained by the fact that the local ground water level drops with receding tidal water level and the subsurface sediment (mud layer in present case) gets dewatered or dried up earlier below high ground than below low ground. This is evidenced by rapid and continuous oozing out of mud slur and consequent growth of compound mounds in low ground during neap tide interval despite cessation of mound building process in high ground ( Figure 7 View FIGURE 7 ). So, the volume of mound is a measure of the subsurface moistness of the mud layer (or formation of mud slur) rather than the amount of vertical excavation. This is contrary to the idea that the volume of the burrow mouth sediment heap is a measure of subsurface burrow volume as in the case of Ocypode burrows in nearby dry sands beach. The size of the mud-mounds, thus, formed was observed to be largest in low ground during neap tides ( Figure 6.5 View FIGURE 6. 1 -10). This is true for the sediment mounds grown around burrow mouths of intertidal benthic crabs in Korean mud flats ( Lee and Koh, 1994).
Influence of Mangrove Vegetation
Uca lactea View in CoL ecologically belongs to mangrove communities. But, they construct mud-mounds in open substrate having thinly populated mangrove vegetation ( Figure 2.1 View FIGURE 2. 1 ). There may be many reasons for this. Firstly, they avoid subsurface obstruction of root systems for quick burrowing and removal of mud slur. This suggests that vegetation does not provide structural support for their burrows or a refuge from predators. Secondly, these crabs need visual landmarks as well as employ visual signals and hence avoid thickly vegetated habitats that hinder visibility. Thirdly, they avoid living within forest because their waving behavior during mating makes them conspicuous to predators, as in the case with U. marionis View in CoL in this area ( De, 2009). Effects of vegetation on burrowing differ among different species of Uca ( Nobbs, 2003) View in CoL . Being Australian intertidal mangrove communities, Uca flammula Crane, 1975 View in CoL ), Uca signata ( Hess, 1865) View in CoL and Uca elegans ( George and Jones, 1982) View in CoL live in forest, edge and clearing habitats, respectively ( Nobbs, 2003). Mud-mounds are absent in open sandy beach surface wherein several species of the crab genus Ocypode View in CoL , polychaete Diopatra cuprea ( Bosc, 1802) View in CoL , bivalves and gastropods thrive in large numbers because of the absence of exploitable muddy substrate on or subsurface within the burrowing limit of Uca View in CoL .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Genus |
Uca lactea
De, C 2015 |
Uca flammula
Crane 1975 |
Ocypode
Weber 1795 |