Growth activity of fish larvae appearing in the Kuroshio and its neighbouring waters

  • Kume Gen
    Faculty of Fisheries, Kagoshima University
  • Kobari Toru
    Faculty of Fisheries, Kagoshima University
  • Manako Yusuke
    Graduate School of Agriculture, Forest and Fisheries, Kagoshima University Present address: IDEA Consultants, Inc.,
  • Komorita Tomohiro
    Faculty of Environmental and Symbiotic Sciences, Prefectural University of Kumamoto
  • Ichinomiya Mutsuo
    Faculty of Environmental and Symbiotic Sciences, Prefectural University of Kumamoto
  • Habano Akimasa
    Faculty of Fisheries, Kagoshima University
  • Azuma Takafumi
    Faculty of Fisheries, Kagoshima University

Bibliographic Information

Other Title
  • 黒潮およびその周辺海域における仔稚魚の成長活性
Published
2022-08-25
Resource Type
journal article
DOI
  • 10.24763/bpsj.69.2_93
Publisher
The Plankton Society of Japan

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Description

<p>It has been thought that food availability for fish larvae was poor in the Kuroshio because of the low standing stocks of plankton in the oligotrophic conditions under thermal stratification throughout the year. Despite a potential risk or disadvantage for larval survival and growth, Kuroshio and its neighbouring waters are nursery grounds for the early life stages of various fishes. Here, we compared the growth activity of fish larvae among 15 taxonomic groups, including 11 families in the Kuroshio and its neighbouring waters, based on protein synthetase activity and protein contents. Protein-specific (spAARS), individual-based aminoacyl tRNA synthetase activities (iAARS), and protein contents (PRO) of fish larvae ranged from 2 to 232 nmol PPi mg protein−1 h−1, from 1 to 21 μmol PPi ind−1 d−1, and from <1 to 26 mg ind−1, respectively. spAARS, iAARS and PRO were variable among the taxonomic groups and were not classified between mesopelagic groups and the others. Compiling these measurements among all taxonomic groups, a significant negative correlation was found for spAARS to PRO. The correlation showed no significant difference between the Kuroshio and its neighbouring coastal waters, indicating that growth activities to fish larvae body mass were comparable in the Kuroshio and its neighbouring waters. Based on nonmetric multidimensional scaling on spAARS, iAARS and PRO among 15 taxonomic groups, two different groups were classified for fish larvae, represented by the high iAARS under the high PRO but low spAARS (Group 1) and the low iAARS under the low PRO but high spAARS (Group 2), representing the different life strategies for larval growth among the taxonomic groups. The present findings suggest that these biochemical indices are useful for evaluating the growth activity of fish larvae among various taxonomic groups and that food availability is not poor enough to support larval growth in the Kuroshio and its neighbouring waters.</p>

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