| Literature DB >> 30416881 |
Pieterjan Verhelst1,2,3,4, Jens De Meyer5, Jan Reubens4, Johan Coeck2, Peter Goethals3, Tom Moens1, Ans Mouton2.
Abstract
Since the early 20th century, European eels (Anguilla anguilla L.) have been dichotomously classified into 'narrow' and 'broad' heads. These morphs are mainly considered the result of a differential food choice, with narrow heads feeding primarily on small/soft prey and broad heads on large/hard prey. Yet, such a classification implies that head-width variation follows a bimodal distribution, leading to the assumption of disruptive selection. We investigated the head morphology of 272 eels, caught over three consecutive years (2015-2017) at a single location in the Zeeschelde (Belgium). Based on our results, BIC favored a unimodal distribution, while AIC provided equal support for a unimodal and a bimodal distribution. Notably, visualization of the distributions revealed a strong overlap between the two normal distributions under the bimodal model, likely explaining the ambiguity under AIC. Consequently, it is more likely that head-width variation followed a unimodal distribution, indicating there are no disruptive selection pressures for bimodality in the Zeeschelde. As such, eels could not be divided in two distinct head-width groups. Instead, their head widths showed a continuum of narrow to broad with a normal distribution. This pattern was consistent across all maturation stages studied here.Entities:
Keywords: Bimodality; Condition; Disruptive selection; European eel; Head dimorphism; Maturation stages; Speed; Telemetry; Unimodality
Year: 2018 PMID: 30416881 PMCID: PMC6225841 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.5773
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Study area with the catch location at the tidal weir in Merelbeke (asterisk) and the position of the acoustic listening stations (triangles) in the Zeeschelde.
Numbers of eels caught per maturation stage with the different morphometrics: total length (TL), body weight (BW), left horizontal and vertical eye diameters (EDh and EDv, respectively) and left pectoral fin length (FL).
Means ± SD (range) are given.
| Stage | Number | TL (mm) | BW (g) | EDh (mm) | EDv (mm) | FL (mm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | 51 | 345 ± 76 (184–501) | 76 ± 46 (9–222) | 4.11 ± 0.97 (2.01–5.76) | 3.84 ± 0.92 (1.67–5.39) | 15.42 ± 3.78 (7.88–25.44) |
| FII | 68 | 499 ± 47 (426–642) | 213 ± 76 (88–478) | 5.93 ± 0.48 (4.66–7.02) | 5.51 ± 0.46 (4.59–6.65) | 23.22 ± 2.50 (16.68–29.98) |
| FIII | 91 | 639 ± 78 (505–835) | 504 ± 199 (141–1106) | 7.65 ± 0.70 (6.28–9.08) | 7.14 ± 0.69 (5.46–9.70) | 30.38 ± 3.78 (24.24–40.32) |
| FIV | 15 | 815 ± 67 (707–932) | 1173 ± 248 (771–1830) | 10.43 ± 0.81 (9.31–12.49) | 9.76 ± 0.79 (8.91–11.86) | 41.17 ± 4.54 (30.84–48.18) |
| FV | 40 | 630 ± 70 (510–775) | 502 ± 177 (189–912) | 8.86 ± 0.94 (7.40–11.18) | 8.40 ± 0.90 (6.95–10.39) | 32.80 ± 4.03 (25.84–45.37) |
| MII | 7 | 386 ± 3 (335–428) | 111 ± 39 (66–170) | 6.69 ± 1.26 (4.47–8.16) | 6.22 ± 1.09 (4.27–7.52) | 20.06 ± 3.89 (12.97–25.75) |
Figure 2Head measurements based on the dorsal picture of an eel’s head on graph paper (HL, head length; HW, head width; SL, snout length) (photo credit: Pieterjan Verhelst).
Figure 3Regression between the ratio head width : head length (HW/HL) and total body length (TL).
Values of the model selection criteria AIC and BIC for a unimodal and bimodal distribution.
| Model selection criterion | Unimodal | Bimodal |
|---|---|---|
| AIC | −1,148 | −1,149 |
| BIC | −1,141 | −1,134 |
Figure 4Unimodal (A) and bimodal fit (B) of normal distributions (solid lines) on the density distribution of the residuals (dashed lines).
Figure 5The residual variation according to the six maturation stages (I,FII, FIII, FIV, FV and MII).
The number of eels per stage are indicated above the boxplot.
The AIC and BIC per maturation stage (I, FII, FIII, FIV, FV and MII) for both unimodal and bimodal support.
| Stage | Unimodal | Bimodal | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AIC | BIC | AIC | BIC | |
| I | −206 | −202 | −208 | −200 |
| FII | −282 | −277 | −288 | −279 |
| FIII | −384 | −379 | −380 | −370 |
| FIV | −59 | −58 | −60 | −57 |
| FV | −175 | −171 | −171 | −164 |
| MII | −28 | −28 | −30 | −30 |
Figure 6Unimodal and bimodal fit of normal distributions (solid lines) on the density distribution of the residuals (dashed lines) for each maturation stage (I, FII, FIII, FIV, FV and MII).
Figure 7The relative condition (Kn) increases with a broader head width (unstandardized residuals).
Figure 8Migration speeds in relation to the head width (unstandardized residuals).