Abstract
Burrows of the thalassinidean shrimp Biffarius arenosus (Poore, 1975) were investigated by in situ resin-casting on an intertidal sandflat in Western Port, southern Australia. Even though burrow casts exhibited interspecific variation, all had at least two openings, a U-shaped top and a series of tunnels and chambers. The space occupied by the burrows was deeper than it was wide; a maximal depth of 58 cm was recorded. Inhalant and exhalant shafts were restricted relative to tunnel diameter, and were often arranged in a multi-layered U-shape. Additional shafts branching from deeper sections of the burrows were occasionally observed. The main section of a burrow, extending from the base of the U, usually consisted of a downward spiral or an irregular spiral combined with some straight tunnel sections, all with a circular cross-section. The central spiral branched into further tunnels and chambers. Nearly all casts possessed peripheral chambers positioned either at the edges of horizontal lattices or in the deepest sections of the burrow. No evidence of plant material was found in peripheral chambers. Major burrow features were consistent with B. arenosus adopting a deposit-feeding trophic mode and collecting its food below the sediment surface.
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Received: 17 July 1998 / Accepted: 26 November 1998
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Bird, F., Poore, G. Functional burrow morphology of Biffarius arenosus (Decapoda: Callianassidae) from southern Australia. Marine Biology 134, 77–87 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002270050526
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002270050526