Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Temperature-dependent spawning behaviour and larval thermohaline associations of Bering Sea groundfish
View through CrossRef
Abstract
The Bering Sea is a productive large marine ecosystem that supports numerous commercial fisheries, while climate change is introducing rapid warming and freshening, especially in coastal water. The success of early life stages of marine fish can impact adult abundance levels; little is known about how behavioural or physiological plasticity in relation to environmental changes at one stage (e.g. spawning) may affect survival during subsequent stages (e.g. larvae), nor whether trade-offs exist that affect how a species demonstrates such plasticity. We utilized a statistical approach to examine phenological and geographical flexibility in spawning behaviour for four species of groundfish. In situ sea surface temperature (SST) and salinity (SSS) associations were also estimated by statistical models for six species of groundfish larvae. All species exhibited greater spawning geography flexibility than phenological flexibility during the egg stage. All larval stages exhibited specific temperature and salinity associations across unique combinations of SST and SSS. These species-specific patterns, in the context of potential climate change impacts, suggest that flexibility in spawning behaviour may not adequately compensate for the presence of unfavourable habitats at the larval stage.
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Title: Temperature-dependent spawning behaviour and larval thermohaline associations of Bering Sea groundfish
Description:
Abstract
The Bering Sea is a productive large marine ecosystem that supports numerous commercial fisheries, while climate change is introducing rapid warming and freshening, especially in coastal water.
The success of early life stages of marine fish can impact adult abundance levels; little is known about how behavioural or physiological plasticity in relation to environmental changes at one stage (e.
g.
spawning) may affect survival during subsequent stages (e.
g.
larvae), nor whether trade-offs exist that affect how a species demonstrates such plasticity.
We utilized a statistical approach to examine phenological and geographical flexibility in spawning behaviour for four species of groundfish.
In situ sea surface temperature (SST) and salinity (SSS) associations were also estimated by statistical models for six species of groundfish larvae.
All species exhibited greater spawning geography flexibility than phenological flexibility during the egg stage.
All larval stages exhibited specific temperature and salinity associations across unique combinations of SST and SSS.
These species-specific patterns, in the context of potential climate change impacts, suggest that flexibility in spawning behaviour may not adequately compensate for the presence of unfavourable habitats at the larval stage.
Related Results
Arkæologerne og Vitus Berings grav. En studie i kildetilpasning
Arkæologerne og Vitus Berings grav. En studie i kildetilpasning
The Archaeologists and Vitus Bering’s Grave – a Study in Source ManipulationIn 1991 Danish and Russian archaeologists excavated six graves on Bering Island. The remains in grave No...
PEMIJAHAN IKAN GABUS (Channa striata) SECARA ALAMI DAN SEMI ALAMI
PEMIJAHAN IKAN GABUS (Channa striata) SECARA ALAMI DAN SEMI ALAMI
ABSTRACTSpawning is early life cycle of fishes and breeding program process. Wild of snakehead fish (Channa striata) can spawning in the open water as fish habits. At aquaculture e...
Assessment of Controlled Spawning Practices and Female Broodstock Replacement on Reproductive and Production Metrics in Culture of Gourami (Osphronemus goramy)
Assessment of Controlled Spawning Practices and Female Broodstock Replacement on Reproductive and Production Metrics in Culture of Gourami (Osphronemus goramy)
Gourami (Osphronemus goramy) is a freshwater fish species that has gained significant popularity among consumers due to its economic value and high nutritional content. However, va...
Submesoscale Thermohaline Compensation and Its Role in Frontogenesis
Submesoscale Thermohaline Compensation and Its Role in Frontogenesis
Abstract
Upper thermohaline properties play a critical role in mediating the transfer of momentum, heat, and biogeochemical tracers, thereby influencing the globa...
Teoria kontroli społecznej w kryminologii
Teoria kontroli społecznej w kryminologii
"Social control" is one of thę most fundamental concepts in sociology. Nevertheless, the meaning of that term has changed, parallel with the development of sociolo...
Summer Chukchi Sea Near-Surface Salinity Variability in Satellite Observations and Ocean Models
Summer Chukchi Sea Near-Surface Salinity Variability in Satellite Observations and Ocean Models
The Chukchi Sea is an open estuary in the southwestern Arctic. Its near-surface salinities are higher than those of the surrounding open Arctic waters due to the key inflow of salt...
Closure of the Bering Strait to prevent an AMOC tipping
Closure of the Bering Strait to prevent an AMOC tipping
The present-day Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is considered to be a prominent tipping element and its collapse would have grave consequences on the global clim...
STATE OF STOCKS AND MODERN FISHERY OF ATKA MACKEREL PLEUROGRAMMUS MONOPTERYGIUS (PALLAS, 1810) IN THE OLYUTORSKY-NAVARINSKY AREA OF THE BERING SEA
STATE OF STOCKS AND MODERN FISHERY OF ATKA MACKEREL PLEUROGRAMMUS MONOPTERYGIUS (PALLAS, 1810) IN THE OLYUTORSKY-NAVARINSKY AREA OF THE BERING SEA
Atka mackerel Pleurogrammus monopterygius is one of the mass species of fam. Hexagrammidae that inhabits the boreal and subarctic waters of the North Pacific and forms two large po...

