Literature DB >> 25756898

Larval fish feeding ecology, growth and mortality from two basins with contrasting environmental conditions of an inner sea of northern Patagonia, Chile.

Mauricio F Landaeta1, Claudia A Bustos2, Jorge E Contreras3, Franco Salas-Berríos2, Pámela Palacios-Fuentes2, Mónica Alvarado-Niño4, Jaime Letelier5, Fernando Balbontín6.   

Abstract

During austral spring 2011, a survey was carried out in the inland sea (41°30'-44°S) of north Patagonia, South Pacific, studying a northern basin (NB: Reloncaví Fjord, Reloncaví Sound and Ancud Gulf) characterized by estuarine regime with stronger vertical stratification and warmer (11-14 °C) and most productive waters, and a southern basin (SB: Corcovado Gulf and Guafo mouth), with more oceanic water influence, showed mixed conditions of the water column, colder (11-10.5 °C) and less productive waters. Otolith microstructure and gut content analysis of larval lightfish Maurolicus parvipinnis and rockfish Sebastes oculatus were studied. Larval M. parvipinnis showed similar growth rates in both regions (0.13-0.15 mm d(-1)), but in NB larvae were larger-at-age than in SB. Larval S. oculatus showed no differences in size-at-age and larval growth (0.16 and 0.11 mm d(-1) for NB and SB, respectively). M. parvipinnis larvae from NB had larger number of prey items (mostly invertebrate eggs), similar total volume in their guts and smaller prey size than larvae collected in SB (mainly calanoid copepods). Larval S. oculatus had similar number, volume and body width of prey ingested at both basins, although prey ingestion rate by size was 5 times larger in NB than in SB, and prey composition varied from nauplii in NB to copepodites in SB. This study provides evidence that physical-biological interactions during larval stages of marine fishes from Chilean Patagonia are species-specific, and that in some cases large size-at-age correspond to increasing foraging success.
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Keywords:  Feeding success; Fish larvae; Maurolicus parvipinnis; Microincrement; Otolith; Sebastes oculatus

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25756898     DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2015.03.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mar Environ Res        ISSN: 0141-1136            Impact factor:   3.130


  2 in total

1.  Global phylogeography suggests extensive eucosmopolitanism in Mesopelagic Fishes (Maurolicus: Sternoptychidae).

Authors:  David J Rees; Jan Y Poulsen; Tracey T Sutton; Paulo A S Costa; Mauricio F Landaeta
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-11-25       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  Seasonal and diel variations in the vertical distribution, composition, abundance and biomass of zooplankton in a deep Chilean Patagonian Fjord.

Authors:  Nur Garcia-Herrera; Astrid Cornils; Jürgen Laudien; Barbara Niehoff; Juan Höfer; Günter Försterra; Humberto E González; Claudio Richter
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2022-01-25       Impact factor: 2.984

  2 in total

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