FATIGUE DAMAGE: REPEATED LOADING ENABLES CRABS TO OPEN LARGER BIVALVES
Open Access
- 1 December 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The Biological Bulletin
- Vol. 171 (3) , 538-547
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1541622
Abstract
Observations of behavior and direct measurements of force indicated that the cancrid crab Cancer productus could directly crush only the smallest specimens of Protothaca staminea, a venerid bivalve. Crabs opened larger P. staminea by repeatedly loading the same region of the bivalve''s shell with a chela; we hypothesized that this repeated loading caused fatigue of the shell material. To test whether significant fatigue damage would accumulate in the number of cycles a crab was likely to exert, live bivalves and cleaned valves were cyclically loaded in a mechanical testing machine to loads of a constant maximum amplitude of 70-100% of the bivalves'' predicted static strength. Failure frequently occurred in fewer than 200 cycles. Recordings from strain gauges attached to the chelae of crabs showed that during an attack on a bivalve a crab would squeeze more than 200 times and that failure of the bivalve could occur during a force pulse which was weaker than previous force pulse. We conclude that repeated loading enables crabs to open larger bivalves than could be crushed outright; by greatly increasing the maximum size of prey vulnerability this expands the size range of molluscan prey available to crabs.Keywords
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