Feeding by the sand crab Portunus pelagicus on material discarded from prawn trawlers in Moreton Bay, Australia

1987 ◽  
Vol 95 (3) ◽  
pp. 387-393 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. J. Wassenberg ◽  
B. J. Hill
1990 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 27 ◽  
Author(s):  
TJ Wassenberg ◽  
BJ Hill

Prawn trawlers in Moreton Bay, Queensland, discard about 3000 t of material each year. About 3% floats, and the rest sinks. The floating component is almost entirely fish. At night, floating discards are eaten by silver gulls (Larus novaehollandiae), crested terns (Sterna bergii) and, to a lesser extent, dolphins (Tursiops truncatus). There is little trawling during the day but the last discards are dumped overboard around dawn. At this time cormorants (Phalacrocorax varius) join the scavengers. Birds and dolphins scavenged only fish and cephalopods, and not crustaceans nor echinoderms. Birds are selective as to the size of fish they will eat, but most of the whole fish in the discards are below 50 g, and the largest fish that crested terns ate was 100 g. Dolphins are capable of taking the largest of the discarded fish. Most of the material that sinks is crustaceans (54%) and echinoderms (18%); the rest is elasmo- branchs and rubble. At night, about half of the fish that sink are eaten by diving birds and by dolphins. There was no indication of mid-water scavenging of sinking discards, except for cormorants and dolphins in the upper water column. Approximately 11% of the discards that reach the bottom comprise fish and crustaceans, which are eaten by crabs (Portunus pelagicus) and fish. The remainder- chiefly crabs, echinoderms and elasmobranchs-reach the bottom alive. Altogether, about 20% of discards are eaten by surface and bottom scavengers. Discards are probably important in maintaining populations of the major scavengers.


1986 ◽  
Vol 37 (6) ◽  
pp. 707 ◽  
Author(s):  
MJ Williams

Laboratory and field trials of a modified Floy FD67 anchor tag were conducted on P. pelagicus in Moreton Bay, Queensland. The tags did not affect short-term survival of the crabs in the laboratory. Only 470 of 1754 crabs tagged and released in the field were returned. Return rates of crabs by size, sex, and area of tagging class were markedly heterogeneous. Poor visibility of the tags on recapture, regardless of their colour, makes this tag unsuitable for any quantitative population studies. Poor return rates were exacerbated by fishermen not examining categories of crabs that are unmarketable.


1994 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 169 ◽  
Author(s):  
WD Sumpton ◽  
MA Potter ◽  
GS Smith

In Moreton Bay, Queensland, externae of Sacculina granifera Boschma were found in 7.0% of adult males and 123% of adult females of Portunus pelagicus. Infection rates were seasonal for both sexes and higher in the adult female population, with more than 20% of adult females carrying externae during some summer months. Infection rates were less than 3% in areas outside the bay and generally highest in the southern and central bay. Nineteen males and 15 females had abdominal scars where externae had become dislodged. The gonads of most parasitized crabs were underdeveloped, but 5.6% of externa-bearing females and 10% of externa-bearing males also had well developed gonads. Two female sand crabs were found with both a small egg mass and a mature externa (a condition not previously reported). Size distributions of infected and uninfected adult crabs were similar, suggesting that large crabs as well as juvenile crabs were likely to be infected.


1991 ◽  
Vol 42 (6) ◽  
pp. 751 ◽  
Author(s):  
MA Potter ◽  
WD Sumpton ◽  
GS Smith

Selected mature male sand crabs (Portunus pelagicus) (6827 individuals with carapace widths of 120-192 mm) were tagged with Floy ED-68BA anchor tags and released in 14 areas of Moreton Bay and adjacent oceanic waters. In all, 1003 tagged crabs (14.7%) were recaptured, with 79% of these recaptured less than 2 km from their release points and 4% recaptured more than 10 km from their release points. Of the total recaptures, 63% were made within 14 days of crabs being released. Commercial pot fishers recaptured the largest proportion (70%) of crabs, whereas recreational fishers and commercial trawl fishers recaptured only 18 and 12% of tagged crabs, respectively. Recapture rates varied from 2 to 59%, depending on location, reflecting a massive spatial heterogeneity of fishing effort. Only 2.6% of recaptured crabs moulted between release and recapture. Crabs that were undamaged at release had twice the recapture rate of damaged crabs (i.e. crabs that had missing appendages), and the probability of recapture increased with crab size. Under laboratory conditions, unmodified Floy FD-68BA tags reduced the short-term survival of male P. pelagicus, possibly because of bacterial infection, and it was concluded that Floy anchor tags were not suitable for field growth studies of P. pelagicus.


1990 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 545 ◽  
Author(s):  
WD Sumpton ◽  
GS Smith

The effect of temperature on emergence, activity and feeding of the sand crab, Portunus pelagicus (L.), was measured under laboratory conditions. Crab emergence was greatest at night, particularly shortly after dusk. Males were significantly more active than females, but the activity of both sexes declined with falling temperature. There were no significant differences in the amount of food consumed by male and female P. pelagicus within the temperature range 16.5-26�C. It was concluded that sexual differences in catchability, as a result of differential activity and feeding, were not responsible for the seasonal changes in catch per unit effort of male and female P. pelagicus in the Moreton Bay trap fishery.


2004 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 241 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shane W. Gaddes ◽  
Wayne D. Sumpton

The parasites of some decapod crustaceans are known to cause sterilisation of their hosts, and can thus have an important impact on the population dynamics of infested species. Blue swimmer crabs (Portunus pelagicus) collected in three areas around Moreton Bay, Australia were examined for the presence of epizoic barnacles in their branchial chambers and on their carapace. Of the 952 crabs inspected 92% were infested with Octolasmis spp. The mean number of barnacles (predominantly Octolasmis warwickii) per carapace and gill chamber (mainly O. angulata) were 2.35 and 71.1, respectively. Barnacle infestation of gills was found to differ significantly by area, season and sex with the deeper offshore areas exhibiting the highest number of barnacles. The distribution within the hosts showed barnacles were more likely to be distributed in areas closer to the inhalant aperture. Highest abundances were found on the proximal surface of the hypobranchial side of gills 3, 4 and 5. Host moult stage and parasitism by Sacculina granifera were also found to affect the abundance of epizoic barnacles in some areas.


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