@inbook {950, title = {Crustacea}, booktitle = {Fauna Japonica sive Descriptio Animalium, quae in Itinere per Japoniam, Jussu et Auspiciis Superiorum, qui Summum in India Batava Imperium Tenent, Suscepto, Annis 1823{\textendash}1830 Collegit, Notis, Observationibus et Adumbrationibus Illustravit}, year = {1844}, pages = {1-243}, publisher = {Lugduni-Batavorum}, organization = {Lugduni-Batavorum}, address = {Leiden}, author = {de Haan, W.}, editor = {von Siebold, P.F.} } @article {366, title = {Host use patterns and demography in a guild of tropical sponge-dwelling shrimps}, journal = {Marine Ecology-Progress Series}, volume = {90}, number = {2}, year = {1992}, note = {USA1992English}, pages = {127-138}, abstract = {Demographic consequences of the commensal lifestyle of shrimps Synalpheus spp. were assessed by sampling sponges and coral rubble on reefs in Caribbean Panama. Eight of 22 species were found solely or primarily within the internal canals of sponges. Among these sponge-dwellers, host specificity ranged from generation (occurrence in gtoreq 4 host species) to specialization on a single host species, and sponges used in the field were also preferreed in laboratory choice assays. Living in sponges had important consequences for shrimp populations. Parasitism by epicaridean isopods averaged 6 times higher in obligate sponge-dwellers (17\%) than in free-living species (2.5\%). Sponge species differed in the mean size and size range of habitable spaces they provide, number of potentially competing Synalpheus species they support, and vulnerability of associated shrimps to parasitism. Similarly, conspecific shrimp populations occupying different hosts differed demographically. Specifically, populations and Synalpheus brooksi in the sponge Spheciospongia vesparium were significantly less dense, less parasitized, had larger body sizes, and tended toward higher proportions of mature females than conspecifics in the co-occurring sponge Agelas clathrodes. High host specificity, regional variation in host use, and demographic and genetic differentiation among conspecific shrimps in different host species suggest that the commensal lifestyle has pervasive, and potentially evolutionarily important, consequences for the population biology of this diverse group of shrimps.}, keywords = {Agelas clathrodes (Porifera), Animalia, animals, Arthropoda, Arthropods, Comparative and Experimental Morphology, Crustaceans, Ecology, Ecology (Environmental Sciences), Environmental Biology/Animal [07508], Environmental Biology/Oceanography [07512], Environmental Sciences), Evolution [01500], Evolution and Adaptation, Genetics, Genetics and Cytogenetics/Animal [03506], Genetics and Cytogenetics/Population Genetics (1972- ) [03509], Invertebrata, Invertebrates, Malacostraca: Crustacea, Marine Ecology (Ecology, Neotropical region), Panama (Central America, Physiology, Physiology and Pathology/Arthropoda-Crustacea [64054], Physiology and Pathology/Porifera [64006], Population Genetics (Population Studies), Porifera [39000], Porifera: Invertebrata, Spheciospongia vesparium (Organisms - Unspecified), sponge (Porifera), Synalpheus brooksi (Malacostraca), Synalpheus spp. (Malacostraca)}, author = {Duffy, J. E.} }