906 research outputs found
Length correction for larval and early-juvenile Atlantic menhaden (Brevoortia tyrannus) after preservation in alcohol
Body length measurement is an important part of growth, condition, and mortality analyses of larval and juvenile fish. If the measurements are not accurate (i.e., do not reflect real fish length), results of subsequent analyses may be affected considerably (McGurk, 1985; Fey, 1999; Porter et al., 2001). The primary cause of error in fish length measurement is shrinkage related to collection and
preservation (Theilacker, 1980; Hay, 1981; Butler, 1992; Fey, 1999). The magnitude of shrinkage depends on many factors, namely the duration and speed of the collection tow, abundance of other planktonic organisms in the sample (Theilacker, 1980; Hay, 1981; Jennings, 1991), the type and
strength of the preservative (Hay, 1982), and the species of fish (Jennings, 1991; Fey, 1999). Further, fish size affects shrinkage (Fowler and Smith, 1983; Fey, 1999, 2001), indicating that live length should be modeled as a function of preserved length (Pepin et al., 1998; Fey, 1999)
An Integrated Assessment of the Introduction of Lionfish (Pterois volitans/miles complex) to the Western Atlantic Ocean.
Lionfish (Pterois volitans/miles complex) are venomous coral reef fishes from the Indian and western Pacific oceans that are now found in the western Atlantic Ocean. Adult lionfish have been observed from Miami, Florida to Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, and juvenile lionfish have been observed off North Carolina, New York, and Bermuda. The large number of adults observed and the occurrence of juveniles indicate that lionfish are established and reproducing along the southeast United States coast.
Introductions of marine species occur in many ways. Ballast water discharge, a very common method of introduction for marine invertebrates, is responsible for many freshwater fish introductions. In contrast, most marine fish introductions result from intentional stocking for fishery purposes. Lionfish, however, likely were introduced via unintentional or intentional aquarium releases, and the introduction of lionfish into United States waters should lead to an assessment of the threat posed by the aquarium trade as a vector for fish introductions.
Currently, no management actions are being taken to limit the effect of lionfish on the southeast United States continental shelf ecosystem. Further, only limited funds have been made available for research. Nevertheless, the extent of the introduction has been documented and a forecast of the maximum potential spread of lionfish is being developed. Under a scenario of no management actions and limited research, three predictions are made:
● With no action, the lionfish population will continue to grow along the southeast United States shelf.
● Effects on the marine ecosystem of the southeast United States will become more noticeable as the lionfish population grows.
● There will be incidents of lionfish envenomations of divers and/or fishers along the east coast of the United States.
Removing lionfish from the southeast United States continental shelf ecosystem would be expensive and likely impossible. A bounty could be established that would encourage the removal of fish and provide specimens for research. However, the bounty would need to be lower than the price of fish in the aquarium trade (~50 each) to ensure that captured specimens were from the wild. Such a low bounty may not provide enough incentive for capturing lionfish in the wild. Further, such action would only increase the interaction between the public and lionfish, increasing the risk of lionfish envenomations.
As the introduction of lionfish is very likely irreversible, future actions should focus on five areas. 1) The population of lionfish should be tracked. 2) Research should be conducted so that scientists can make better predictions regarding the status of the invasion and the effects on native species, ecosystem function, and ecosystem services. 3) Outreach and education efforts must be increased, both specifically toward lionfish and more generally toward the aquarium trade as a method of fish introductions. 4) Additional regulation should be considered to reduce the frequency of marine fish introduction into U.S. waters. However, the issue is more complicated than simply limiting the import of non-native species, and these complexities need to be considered simultaneously. 5) Health care providers along the east coast of the United States need to be notified that a venomous fish is now resident along the southeast United States.
The introduction and spread of lionfish illustrates the difficulty inherent in managing introduced species in marine systems. Introduced species often spread via natural mechanisms after the initial introduction. Efforts to control the introduction of marine fish will fail if managers do not consider the natural dispersal of a species following an introduction. Thus, management strategies limiting marine fish introductions need to be applied over the scale of natural ecological dispersal to be effective, pointing to the need for a regional management approach defined by natural processes not by political boundaries.
The introduction and success of lionfish along the east coast should change the long-held perception that marine fish invasions are a minimal threat to marine ecosystems. Research is needed to determine the effects of specific invasive fish species in specific ecosystems. More broadly, a cohesive plan is needed to manage, mitigate and minimize the effects of marine invasive fish species on ecosystems that are already compromised by other human activities. Presently, the magnitude of marine fish introductions as a stressor on marine ecosystems cannot be quantified, but can no longer be dismissed as negligible.
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Comparison of average larval fish vertical distributions among species exhibiting different transport pathways on the southeast United States continental shelf
Water currents are vertically structured in many marine systems and as a result, vertical movements by fish larvae and zooplankton affect horizontal transport (Power, 1984).
In estuaries, the vertical movements of larvae with tidal periods can result in their retention or ingress (Fortier
and Leggett, 1983; Rijnsdorp et al., 1985; Cronin and Forward, 1986; Forward et al., 1999). On the continental
shelf, the vertical movements of organisms interact daily and ontogenetically with depth-varying currents to affect horizontal transport (Pillar et al., 1989; Barange and Pillar, 1992; Cowen et al., 1993, 2000; Batchelder et al., 2002)
Focusing Attention on the Health Aspects of Foods Changes Value Signals in vmPFC and Improves Dietary Choice
Attention is thought to play a key role in the computation of stimulus values at the time of choice, which suggests that attention manipulations could be used to improve decision-making in domains where self-control lapses are pervasive. We used an fMRI food choice task with non-dieting human subjects to investigate whether exogenous cues that direct attention to the healthiness of foods could improve dietary choices. Behaviorally, we found that subjects made healthier choices in the presence of health cues. In parallel, stimulus value signals in ventromedial prefrontal cortex were more responsive to the healthiness of foods in the presence of health cues, and this effect was modulated by activity in regions of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. These findings suggest that the neural mechanisms used in successful self-control can be activated by exogenous attention cues, and provide insights into the processes through which behavioral therapies and public policies could facilitate self-control
Cross-shelf and seasonal variation in larval fish assemblages on the southeast United States continental shelf off the coast of Georgia
Seasonal and cross-shelf patterns were investigated in larval fish assemblages on the continental shelf off the coast of Georgia. The influence of environmental factors on
larval distributions also was examined, and larval transport processes on the shelf were considered. Ichthyoplankton and environmental data were collected approximately every other month from spring 2000 to winter
2002. Ten stations were repeatedly sampled along a 110-km cross-shelf transect, including four stations in the vicinity of Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary. Correspondence analysis (CA) on untransformed community
data identified two seasonal (warm weather [spring, summer, and fall] and winter) and three cross-shelf larval assemblages (inner-, mid-, and outer-shelf ). Five environmental factors (temperature, salinity, density,
depth of the water column, and stratification) were related to larval cross-shelf distribution. Specifically,
increased water column stratification was associated with the outer-shelf assemblage in spring, summer, and fall. The inner shelf assemblage was associated with generally lower temperatures and lower salinities in the spring and summer and higher salinities in the winter. The three cross-shelf
regions indicated by the three assemblages coincided with the location of three primary water masses on the shelf. However, taxa occurring together within an assemblage were
transported to different parts of the shelf; thus, transport across the continental shelf off the coast of Georgia cannot be explained solely by twodimensional
physical factors
Effect of type of otolith and preparation technique on age estimation of larval and juvenile spot (Leiostomus xanthurus)
Otoliths of larval and juvenile fish provide a record of age, size, growth, and development (Campana and Neilson,
1985; Thorrold and Hare, 2002). However, determining the time of first increment formation in otoliths (Campana, 2001) and assessing the accuracy (deviation from real age)
and precision (repeatability of increment counts from the same otolith) of increment counts are prerequisites for using otoliths to study the life history of fish (Campana and Moksness, 1991). For most fish species, first increment deposition occurs either at hatching, a day after hatching, or after first feeding and yolksac absorption (Jones, 1986; Thorrold and Hare, 2002). Increment deposition before
hatching also occurs (Barkmann and Beck, 1976; Radtke and Dean, 1982). If first increment deposition does not occur at hatching, the standard procedure is to add a predetermined number to increment counts to estimate fish age (Campana and Neilson, 1985)
Expatriation of Xyrichtys novacula (Pisces: Labridae) larvae: Evidence of rapid cross-slope exchange
Larvae of Xyrichtys novacula (Pisces: Labridae) have been collected in the Middle Atlantic Bight (MAB) hundreds of kilometers north of reported adult ranges by both the Marine Monitoring and Assessment Program (MARMAP) and by our ichthyoplankton cruises. These larvae could be from a previously unknown population north of Cape Hatteras or they could have been transported north from southern populations. In order to examine these two hypotheses both biological and physical oceanographic data were considered, including size-specific larval distribution, larval age, vertical distribution of larvae, satellite imagery of sea surface temperature, and temperature and salinity measurements. Larvae captured during our 1988 ichthyoplankton cruises ranged from 3.11 mm to 13.13 mm in length with small larvae (≤5 mm) found in association with the shelf break and larger larvae (\u3e5 mm) found distributed across the outer shelf and shelf break. Based on aging of daily otolith increments larval age was found to range from 7 to 36 days and backcalculated birthdates, derived from estimated age and date of capture, were found to be from mid-June to early August. Larvae occurred predominantly near the surface (≤10 m) at night and deeper (\u3e10 m) during the day. Concurrent hydrographic data revealed that small larvae were found in shelf water (\u3c35 psu) but with underlying slope water (\u3e35 psu) at depths of 15–30 m suggesting that small larvae were in shelf water at night but either at the boundary with or within slope water during the day. Satellite imagery from 1988 revealed a warm-core ring offshore of our 1988 sampling area. An analysis of historical warm-core ring data from Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization data reports in conjunction with captures of X. novacula during the years 1984–1987 demonstrated that the presence of warm-core rings offshore was associated with the occurrence of X. novacula on the MAB shelf, north of Chesapeake Bay. The feasibility of northward transport associated with the Gulf Stream and cross-slope transport associated with a warm-core ring was examined with a simple model which demonstrated that the required transport velocities were within the range of velocities presented in the literature. It is suggested that larvae are rapidly transported from south of Cape Hatteras to the MAB shelf break by advection associated with the Gulf Stream and a concomitant cross-slope flow related with the western edge of warm-core rings
Larval transport and dispersal in the coastal ocean and consequences for population connectivity
Author Posting. © Oceanography Society, 2007. This article is posted here by permission of Oceanography Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Oceanography 20, 3 (2007): 22-39.Many marine species have small, pelagic early life stages. For those species,
knowledge of population connectivity requires understanding the origin and
trajectories of dispersing eggs and larvae among subpopulations. Researchers have
used various terms to describe the movement of eggs and larvae in the marine environment,
including larval dispersal, dispersion, drift, export, retention, and larval
transport. Though these terms are intuitive and relevant for understanding the
spatial dynamics of populations, some may be nonoperational (i.e., not measurable),
and the variety of descriptors and approaches used makes studies difficult to
compare. Furthermore, the assumptions that underlie some of these concepts are
rarely identified and tested. Here, we describe two phenomenologically
relevant concepts, larval transport and larval dispersal.
These concepts have corresponding operational definitions,
are relevant to understanding population connectivity,
and have a long history in the literature, although they are
sometimes confused and used interchangeably. After defining
and discussing larval transport and dispersal, we consider
the relative importance of planktonic processes to the overall
understanding and measurement of population
connectivity. The ideas considered in this
contribution are applicable to most benthic
and pelagic species that undergo transformations
among life stages. In this review, however,
we focus on coastal and nearshore benthic
invertebrates and fishes.We thank the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, the
National Science Foundation, and the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
for supporting our work
The early life history of swordfish (Xiphias gladius) in the western North Atlantic
Lengths and ages of sword-fish (Xiphias gladius) estimated from increments on otoliths of larvae collected in the Caribbean Sea, Florida Straits, and off the southeastern United States, indicated two growth phases. Larvae complete yolk and oil globule absorption 5 to 6 days after hatching (DAH). Larvae 11 mm eat exclusively neustonic fish larvae. This diet indicates that young larvae <11 mm occupy the near-surface pelagia, whereas, older and longer larvae are neustonic. Spawning dates for larvae collected in various regions of the western North Atlantic, along with the abundance and spatial distribution of the youngest larvae, indicate that spawning peaks in three seasons and in five regions. Swordfish spawn in the Caribbean Sea, or possibly to the east, in winter, and in the western Gulf of Mexico in spring. Elsewhere swordfish spawn year-round, but spawning peaks in the spring in the north-central Gulf of Mexico, in the summer off southern Florida, and in the spring and early summer off the southeastern United States. The western Gulf Stream frontal zone is the focus of spawning off the southeastern coast of the United States, whereas spawning in the Gulf of Mexico seems to be focused in the vicinity of the Gulf Loop Current. Larvae may use the Gulf of Mexico and the outer continental shelf off the east coast of the United States as nursery areas. Some larvae may be transported northward, but trans-Atlantic transport of larvae is unlikely
Juvenile fish assemblages collected on unconsolidated sediments of the southeast United States continental shelf
This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. The definitive version was published in Fishery Bulletin 104 (2006): 256-277.Patterns were investigated in juvenile fish use of unconsolidated sediments on the southeast United States continental shelf off Georgia. Juvenile fish and environmental data
were sampled at ten stations along a
110-km cross-shelf transect, including
four stations surrounding Gray’s Reef
National Marine Sanctuary (Gray’s
Reef NMFS). Cross-shelf stations
were sampled approximately quarterly
from spring 2000 to winter 2002.
Additional stations were sampled on
three transects inshore of Gray’s Reef
NMS and four transects offshore of
the Sanctuary during three cruises
to investigate along-shelf patterns in
the juvenile fish assemblages. Samples
were collected in beam trawls,
and 121 juvenile taxa, of which 33
were reef-associated species, were
identif ied. Correspondence analysis
on untransformed juvenile fish
abundance indicated a cross-shelf
gradient in assemblages, and the
station groupings and assemblages
varied seasonally. During the spring,
fall, and winter, three cross-shelf
regions were identified: inner-shelf,
mid-shelf, and outer-shelf regions. In
the summer, the shelf consisted of a
single juvenile fish assemblage. Water
depth was the primary environmental
variable correlated with cross-shelf
assemblages. However, salinity, density,
and water column stratification
also correlated with the distribution
of assemblages during the spring, fall,
and winter, and along with temperature
likely inf luenced the distribution
of juvenile fish. No along-shelf
spatial patterns were found in the
juvenile fish assemblages, but the
along-shelf dimension sampled was
small (~60 km). Our results revealed
that a number of commercially and
recreationally important species used
unconsolidated sediments on the shelf
off Georgia as juvenile habitat. We
conclude that management efforts
would be improved through a greater
recognition of the importance of these
habitats to fish production and the
interconnectedness of multiple habitats
in the southeast U.S. continental
shelf ecosystem.Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary,
the National Marine Sanctuary Office, and Center for Coastal Fisheries and Habitat Research provided funding for the project
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