Journal article

Three way symbiosis between a goby, a shrimp, and a crab


Authors listWerding, Bernd; Christensen, Bent; Hiller, Alexandra

Publication year2016

Pages897-900

JournalMarine Biodiversity

Volume number46

Issue number4

ISSN1867-1616

eISSN1867-1624

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s12526-016-0453-x

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
A unique case of triple symbiosis between a goby, a pistol shrimp, and a porcellanid crab sharing the same burrow close to reef patches in Lembeh Strait, Indonesia, is described from direct observations for the first time. The burrow, typically occupied by shrimps and gobies, is shared with the porcellanid Enosteoides lobatus. In the goby-shrimp association, the fish inhabits the burrow, which is constructed and kept clean by the shrimp, and the fish warns the shrimp of potential dangers approaching their refuge. The porcellanid lives in the burrow and also benefits from living in a habitat where it could not survive without the two sentinel species. Because the limiting resource for the suspension-feeding porcellanid is protected space, this liaison is an adaptation by E. lobatus to a symbiotic life in a habitat that protects it from predation, and is optimal for filter feeding.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleWerding, B., Christensen, B. and Hiller, A. (2016) Three way symbiosis between a goby, a shrimp, and a crab, Marine Biodiversity, 46(4), pp. 897-900. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12526-016-0453-x

APA Citation styleWerding, B., Christensen, B., & Hiller, A. (2016). Three way symbiosis between a goby, a shrimp, and a crab. Marine Biodiversity. 46(4), 897-900. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12526-016-0453-x



Keywords


AlpheidaeGobiidaeGOBIIDAEGoby-shrimp associationPACIFICPETROLISTHES

Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 01:41