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From Descriptive to Accurate Horseshoe Crab Size Variations in Wild Populations

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 22:21 authored by Li Chan, Akbar John, Salwa Shahimi, Lusita Meilana, Chong Lian, Loh Hoe, Wong Ho, Jayaraj Kumaran, Siddhartha Pati, Bryan Nelson
Horseshoe crabs have survived until Holocene, but their persistence beyond the Anthropocene is challenged by drastic environment changes that entail impoverishments and the resultant unusual growth sizes. Previously, allometry via morphometric ratio was introduced to classify horseshoe crabs into normal-abnormal growth. However, the descriptive size and weight analysis indicated a considerable portion of Tachypleus gigas with normal allometry. This error was caused by the median sorting of values. Therefore, the same data was treated with correlation before generating a linear equation. By being sexual dimorphs, these arthropods actually have gender-specific morphology indicators which could generate a functional allometry. Since the assessed arthropods were mature, the 19 % yield of smaller female T. gigas was possibly due to degradation effects from poor diets or stress. Yet, for this population, an added risk was female-only harvest. Perhaps, close sizing to male counterparts could be perceived a survival strategy by the female T. gigas. More evidence is needed to strengthen this opinion but for now, this assessment method is novel for accurate allometry assessments in the species with sexual dimorphism. Overall, capture fisheries could have negative impacts and when made severe by sex-specific harvest, the unaccounted practices could collapse sustaining populations.

History

Journal

Journal of Ecological Engineering

Volume

23

Issue

12

Start page

273

End page

284

Total pages

12

Publisher

Polish Society of Ecological Engineering

Place published

Poland

Language

English

Copyright

© License CC-BY 4.0

Former Identifier

2006120235

Esploro creation date

2023-02-26

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