Durophagous Predation by King Crabs on the Continental Slope off Antarctica

Kathryn Smith1, Richard B Aronson2, Brittan Victoria Steffel1, James B McClintock3, Margaret Amsler3 and Sven Thatje4, (1)Florida Institute of Technology, Biological Sciences, Melbourne, FL, United States, (2)Florida Institute of Technology, Department of Biological Sciences, Melbourne, FL, United States, (3)University of Alabama at Birmingham, (4)University of Southampton
Abstract:
For perhaps tens of millions of years, marine communities in Antarctica have been essentially devoid of durophagous (shell-crushing) predators, which have been excluded by low temperatures. In their absence, the resident species have evolved in isolation and are slow-moving with limited defenses. Rapidly rising sea temperatures around Antarctica are now relaxing the cold-thermal barrier and appear to be allowing deep-water king crabs (Lithodidae) to move up the continental slope, into shallower water. Their potential to emerge on the continental shelf could drastically restructure the endemic communities that live there; in other areas of the world, lithodids are typically generalist predators of invertebrates. Their diet in Antarctic waters remains unknown and it has been speculated that they are opportunistic scavengers. We report the findings of a trapping study conducted in deep water off the western Antarctic Peninsula in 2015. Stomach contents were analyzed for 18 adult Paralomis birsteini trapped on the continental slope. P. birsteini feed primarily on invertebrates such as echinoderms, gastropods and polychaetes. By understanding the prey species targeted by slope-dwelling lithodids, we can begin to project the future impact of an expansion of king crabs onto the Antarctic continental shelf.