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Biomechanics

A pneumo-hydrostatic skeleton in land crabs

A sophisticated dual support system enables a crab to stay mobile immediately after moulting.

Abstract

Like their aquatic counterparts, terrestrial crabs repeatedly shed their rigid exoskeleton during moulting. But in the case of land crabs, little water is available to provide a temporary hydrostatic skeleton before the new skeleton hardens, and air does not provide the buoyancy necessary to support the animal. Here we show that whenever its exoskeleton is shed, the blackback land crab Gecarcinus lateralis relies on an unconventional type of hydrostatic skeleton that uses both gas and liquid (a ‘pneumo-hydrostat’). To our knowledge, this is the first experimental evidence for a locomotor skeleton that depends on a gas. It establishes a new category of hydrostatic skeletal support and possibly a critical adaptation to life on land for the Crustacea.

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Figure 1: Haemolymph and gut-gas pressures and movement forces in land crabs after shedding of the exoskeleton.

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Correspondence to Jennifer R. A. Taylor.

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Taylor, J., Kier, W. A pneumo-hydrostatic skeleton in land crabs. Nature 440, 1005 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1038/4401005a

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