Literature DB >> 20735690

Salinity-linked growth in anguillid eels and the paradox of temperate-zone catadromy.

D K Cairns1, D A Secor, W E Morrison, J A Hallett.   

Abstract

Temperate-zone anguillid eels use both saline (marine or brackish) and fresh waters during their continental phase, but use of fresh waters is paradoxical because on average these fishes grow more rapidly in saline than in fresh waters. Based on data from anguillid eels whose habitat-residency histories had been determined by Sr:Ca otolithometry, superiority of growth rates in saline water is much greater in American eels Anguilla rostrata in north-eastern North America (mean saline:fresh growth rate ratio 2.07) than in European Anguilla anguilla, Japanese Anguilla japonica and shortfinned Anguilla australis eels (range of mean ratios 1.12-1.14). Data from A. rostrata in the Hudson Estuary, U.S.A., and Prince Edward Island, Canada, were used to test adaptive explanations of catadromous migrations. The hypothesis that lower mortality in fresh water offsets faster growth in saline water was not supported because loss (mortality + emigration ) rates did not vary between saline and fresh zones of the Hudson Estuary. Hypotheses that anguillid eels move to fresh water to escape from larger anguillid eels in saline water or to evaluate habitat quality were not supported by size and age distributions. Catadromy in temperate-zone anguillid eels increases the diversity of occupied habitats and therefore lowers fitness variance caused by environmental fluctuations. Catadromy in temperate-zone anguillid eels could be due to natural selection for maximum geometric mean fitness which is sensitive to fitness variance. Temperate-zone catadromy might also be maladaptive, at least in local areas, due to shifts over time in selective pressures or to inability of panmictic genetic systems to adapt to local conditions.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 20735690     DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8649.2009.02290.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Fish Biol        ISSN: 0022-1112            Impact factor:   2.051


  6 in total

1.  Contamination, parasitism and condition of Anguilla anguilla in three Italian stocks.

Authors:  Silvia Quadroni; Silvana Galassi; Fabrizio Capoccioni; Eleonora Ciccotti; Gilberto Grandi; Giulio A De Leo; Roberta Bettinetti
Journal:  Ecotoxicology       Date:  2012-10-18       Impact factor: 2.823

2.  Does silvering or 11-ketotestosterone affect osmoregulatory ability in the New Zealand short-finned eel (Anguilla australis)?

Authors:  Erin L Damsteegt; Matthew J Wylie; Alvin N Setiawan
Journal:  J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol       Date:  2018-10-29       Impact factor: 1.836

3.  Fishery-induced selection for slow somatic growth in European eel.

Authors:  Daniele Bevacqua; Fabrizio Capoccioni; Paco Melià; Simone Vincenzi; José M Pujolar; Giulio A De Leo; Eleonora Ciccotti
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-05-22       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  RAD-Seq Reveals Patterns of Additive Polygenic Variation Caused by Spatially-Varying Selection in the American Eel (Anguilla rostrata).

Authors:  Charles Babin; Pierre-Alexandre Gagnaire; Scott A Pavey; Louis Bernatchez
Journal:  Genome Biol Evol       Date:  2017-11-01       Impact factor: 3.416

5.  Foraging and metabolic consequences of semi-anadromy for an endangered estuarine fish.

Authors:  Bruce G Hammock; Steven B Slater; Randall D Baxter; Nann A Fangue; Dennis Cocherell; April Hennessy; Tomofumi Kurobe; Christopher Y Tai; Swee J Teh
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-03-14       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Role of estuarine habitats for the feeding ecology of the European eel (Anguilla anguilla L.).

Authors:  Jérémy Denis; Khalef Rabhi; François Le Loc'h; Frida Ben Rais Lasram; Kévin Boutin; Maria Kazour; Mamadou Diop; Marie-Christine Gruselle; Rachid Amara
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-07-06       Impact factor: 3.752

  6 in total

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