Distribution, natural history, and conservation of Cambarus dubius in Pennsylvania
Author
Allison, Patrick F.
Author
Lieb, David A.
Author
Loughman, Zachary J.
text
Journal of Natural History
2022
2022-08-18
56
13 - 16
829
848
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2022.2069056
journal article
127382
10.1080/00222933.2022.2069056
d3937bd3-e349-449d-b6a6-eb3955bda55b
1464-5262
7012082
Cambarus dubius
ecology and life history notes
Cambarus dubius
was collected at elevations ranging from
372 m
to
955 m
, primarily in the valleys between mountain ridges.
The
species was collected from burrows in wet, clay-bottomed roadside ditches, wetlands, forested seeps, wet grassland and agricultural habitat, and stream floodplains
.
Burrow
portals often had fresh mud piled around their entrances in the shape of chimneys, especially after rain events (
Figure 4
(b))
.
Deciduous forest
was the most common macrohabitat associated with collections of
C
. dubius
.
This
species was often found with skunk cabbage, constructing shallow yet complex tunnel systems intertwining horizontally amongst their root systems (
Figure 4
(c))
.
Cambarus dubius
burrows were generally
0.3–1.5 m
in depth and complex, often containing 3–4 ancillary tunnels.
Burrows
would occasionally travel deeper than
1.5 m
, but this was uncommon, especially in skunk cabbage wetlands
.
While
free-living juveniles were collected alongside singular females from burrows, no collections yielded
two adults
from the same burrow
.
Cambarus dubius
was occasionally collected from under boulders in roadside ditches or along the banks of ditches. Tunnels were visible under these boulders, and often had multiple burrow portals directly associated with the boulder. The species was also collected from a flooded ditch during the late morning in late August. At this site, three small
C. dubius
(
16.2–20.4 mm
TCL) that were actively moving in the pooled water of the ditch were captured. These individuals were seen close to their burrow portals, and attempted to escape to their burrows when collected. At another site in mid-May, a single
C. dubius
was found outside of its burrow in a ditch around 21.30–22.00 h.
A total of 141
C. dubius
were collected during this survey, including
33 juveniles
that were measured and returned to their burrows after collection. Mean TCL for
C. dubius
was
25.9 mm
. The largest individual collected was a
39.8 mm
TCL female (
Table 1
). The largest form I male collected was
34.7 mm
TCL, and the smallest form I male was
27.7 mm
TCL. The largest form II male collected was 34.0 mm TCL. The largest ovigerous female collected was 38.0 mm TCL, and the smallest ovigerous female was
32.3 mm
TCL.
Form I
males were collected in
May
and
October
.
Form II
males were collected in
May
, June,
July
,
August
and
October
.
Two
ovigerous females were collected from burrows on 28 and 30
May
, respectively
. The mean egg count was 22.5 eggs per female, with a range of 5–
40 eggs
. No females carrying live young were collected.
Females
were collected alongside free-living juveniles in the same burrow complex during mid-late
June
.