9616259 HARVEY Hermit crabs are best known for using empty snail shells as shelters. Most morphological features that define hermit crabs as a group seem to be adaptations to the asymmetrically coiled shell. A surprising number of species, however, use objects other than snail shells for shelters, or use no shelter at all. These hermit crabs tend to be more symmetrical than their shell-using relatives, and those that use no shelters are also often "carcinized"; that is, the abdomen is reduced and tucked under a wide, heavily armored carapace. Such crabs may not be recognized as hermit crabs, but may instead be wrongly placed in other crab groups. The lack of a reliable phylogenetic history has made it impossible to resolve long-standing questions concerning the evolution of shell use, asymmetry and carcinization in hermit crabs. In this collaborative research project, Alan Harvey (morphology) and Cliff Cunningham (molecular sequences) will integrate extensive morphological and molecular data to generate a robust phylogeny for the hermit crabs and their allies (i.e., the Anomura). With this phylogeny, Harvey and Cunningham will determine 1) how many times anomuran crustaceans independently adopted the shell-using habit; 2) whether the carcinized morphology of nonshelter-using hermit crabs evolved from the asymmetrical morphology of shell-using hermit crabs, or vice versa; 3), which features of both the carcinized and asymmetrical morphologies are influenced by the presence and type of shelter used by hermit crabs.

Agency
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Institute
Division of Environmental Biology (DEB)
Type
Standard Grant (Standard)
Application #
9616259
Program Officer
Charles O'Kelly
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
1997-02-15
Budget End
1999-02-22
Support Year
Fiscal Year
1996
Total Cost
$69,998
Indirect Cost
Name
American Museum Natural History
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10024