Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: https://hdl.handle.net/10495/43378
Título : A bioengineer in the city - the Darwinian fitness of fiddler crabs inhabiting plastic pollution hotspots
Autor : Riascos Vallejos, José Marin
Gómez Restrepo, Nicolás Alberto
metadata.dc.subject.*: Braquiuros - fisiología
Brachyura - physiology
Ciudades
Cities
Ecosistema
Ecosystem
Aptitud Genética
Genetic Fitness
Plásticos
Plastics
Alimentos Marinos
Seafood
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D003386
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D002947
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D017753
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D056084
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D010969
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D017747
Fecha de publicación : 2023
Editorial : Elsevier
Citación : Riascos JM, Gomez N. A bioengineer in the city -the Darwinian fitness of fiddler crabs inhabiting plastic pollution hotspots. Environ Pollut. 2023 Oct 15;335:122254. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122254.
Resumen : ABSTRACT: Mangrove forests have been widely recognized as effective traps for plastic litter, which tends to accumulate in landward areas. In mangrove forests surrounding cities, plastic litter may increase up to two orders of magnitude. Therefore, crabs that process sediments for feeding and burrowing in landward areas are likely to be impacted by marine litter and other disturbances. As counterintuitive as it may seem, crabs are developing dense populations in urban mangroves from different countries, suggesting parallel adaptive processes related to the availability of anthropogenic food sources. To better understand this, we compared the loads of macroplastics within and between mangroves along an urban-rural-wild forest gradient in the Uraba ´ Gulf, Colombian Caribbean. We then assessed if there is directional selection on crab phenotypes likely associated with human-provided food sources in urbanized forests. Finally, we evaluated the hypothesis that crabs in urban areas exhibit increased fecundity and survival - components of the Darwinian fitness - of female crabs in urban (versus wild) populations through three spawning seasons. Crabs in urban areas were larger (males), showed a healthier body condition (both sexes), and females had a larger reproductive lifespan than crabs in wild areas, strongly suggesting responses to the availability of predictable anthropogenic food subsidies in urban forests. Despite this, higher female fecundity was observed only during a spawning season. However, this short-lived increase in fecundity was offset by reduced survival among female crabs in urban forests, likely due to increased predation by birds, which appear to be emerging as dominant consumers in urban mangroves.
metadata.dc.identifier.eissn: 1873-6424
ISSN : 0269-7491
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122254
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos de Revista en Ciencia Ambiental

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