Item Details


Sympatric spawning of <i>Anguilla marmorata</i> and <i>Anguilla japonica</i> in the western North Pacific Ocean Association LOGRAMI http://zotero.org/users/237438 http://zotero.org/users/237438/items/BIPNH5HK 2010-02-24T13:01:14Z 2010-02-24T13:01:14Z BIPNH5HK 6536 journalArticle Kuroki et al. 2009 2
Item Type Journal Article
Author M. Kuroki
Author J. Aoyama
Author M. J. Miller
Author T. Yoshinaga
Author A. Shinoda
Author S. Hagihara
Author K. Tsukamoto
URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8649.2009.02299.x
Volume 74
Issue 9
Pages 1853-1865
Publication Journal of Fish Biology
Date 2009
DOI 10.1111/j.1095-8649.2009.02299.x
Accessed 2010-02-24 13:01:14
Library Catalog Wiley InterScience
Abstract Extensive collections were made of the larvae of the temperate Japanese eel Anguilla japonica and the tropical giant mottled eel Anguilla marmorata in an overlapping area of the North Equatorial Current region of the western North Pacific Ocean. Collections of 189 A. marmorata and &gt; 2500 A. japonica larvae during nine surveys from 1991 to 2007 showed that these two anguillid eels have similar spawning areas just west of the southern West Mariana Ridge. In July to August 2006 and August 2007, morphologically and genetically identified A. marmorata preleptocephali were mainly collected between 14·5201315° N and 1422013142·5° E, where A. japonica preleptocephali were also caught in some of the same net tows. Fewer A. marmorata preleptocephali, however, were collected (n = 31) compared to those of A. japonica (n = c. 165), and fewer small larvae of A. marmorata were collected per tow than A. japonica (n = 1201310 and 12013294, respectively), suggesting relatively smaller spawning aggregations of A. marmorata. The distribution of preleptocephali and small larvae was wider in longitude in A. marmorata (1312013 143° E) than in A. japonica (1372013143° E), while the latitudinal range was almost the same (12201317° N). Although spawning by these two species overlaps both spatially and temporally, the tropical eels of the North Pacific population of A. marmorata probably have a much longer spawning season with fewer spawners, at least in summer, and recruit to a much wider latitudinal range of growth habitats.

Attachments