TY - JOUR
T1 - Evaluation of the larval distribution and migration of the Japanese eel in the western North Pacific
AU - Shinoda, Akira
AU - Aoyama, Jun
AU - Miller, Michael J.
AU - Otake, Tsuguo
AU - Mochioka, Noritaka
AU - Watanabe, Shun
AU - Minegishi, Yuki
AU - Kuroki, Mari
AU - Yoshinaga, Tatsuki
AU - Yokouchi, Kazuki
AU - Fukuda, Nobuto
AU - Sudo, Ryusuke
AU - Hagihara, Seishi
AU - Zenimoto, Kei
AU - Suzuki, Yuzuru
AU - Oya, Machiko
AU - Inagaki, Tadashi
AU - Kimura, Shingo
AU - Fukui, Atsushi
AU - Lee, Tae Won
AU - Tsukamoto, Katsumi
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments We acknowledge the efforts of all the scientists and ship crews who surveyed for leptocephali in many regions of the WNP whose catch data has been examined here. We especially thank the many different captains and crews of the R/V Hakuho Maru whose expert help made successful surveys possible over the years. Many scientists and technicians also helped to deploy the nets and sort many plankton samples during these cruises whose names are too many to mention, but this indispensable help and friendship was greatly appreciated. We also thank the many institutions and funding agencies that supported these research efforts and the operations of the many research vessels that made this study possible. The support to K.T. from the Research Foundation Touwa Shokuhin Shinkoukai and the Eel Research Foundation Nobori-kai is also appreciated.
PY - 2011/9
Y1 - 2011/9
N2 - The distribution of all larval stages of the Japanese eel, Anguilla japonica, were examined using historical catch records and original data in the western North Pacific (WNP) to evaluate existing information about the larval distribution and migration of this species. A total of 148 preleptocephali, 2547 leptocephali, 6 metamorphosing larvae, and 21 glass eels were collected during 37 cruises over a 52-year period (1956-2007). Sampling effort was spatio-temporally biased in latitude/longitude among seasons with sampling effort being concentrated near the western margin of the subtropical gyre near Taiwan in the winter season and extensive effort occurring near the spawning area to the east near the seamount chain of the West Mariana Ridge in summer during the spawning season. The distribution of preleptocephali (4.2-8.7 mm) was limited to a narrow area around 14°N, 142°E just west of the southern part of the seamount chain, while leptocephali (7.7-62.0 mm) were widely distributed at increasing size westward in the North Equatorial Current (NEC) to the region east of Taiwan. Metamorphosing larvae (52.7-61.2 mm) were collected only in the area 21-26°N, 121-129°E to the east of Taiwan, while glass eels (51.3-61.2 mm) occurred only within or west of the Kuroshio. These distributions suggest that leptocephali begin to metamorphose within or just east of the Kuroshio, then after completion of metamorphosis the glass eels detrain from the current and migrate inshore. The relationship between catch date and body size of leptocephali suggested that the spawning season is from April to August, but further sampling is needed to eliminate possible effects of sampling bias. This analysis is consistent with the existing hypothesis that Japanese eel larvae born near the West Mariana Ridge are transported westward in the NEC and then transfer to the Kuroshio to recruit to East Asia, although more sampling effort is needed for later stage larvae in the NEC bifurcation region to help understand the larval migration in relation to the possible impacts of ocean-atmosphere changes.
AB - The distribution of all larval stages of the Japanese eel, Anguilla japonica, were examined using historical catch records and original data in the western North Pacific (WNP) to evaluate existing information about the larval distribution and migration of this species. A total of 148 preleptocephali, 2547 leptocephali, 6 metamorphosing larvae, and 21 glass eels were collected during 37 cruises over a 52-year period (1956-2007). Sampling effort was spatio-temporally biased in latitude/longitude among seasons with sampling effort being concentrated near the western margin of the subtropical gyre near Taiwan in the winter season and extensive effort occurring near the spawning area to the east near the seamount chain of the West Mariana Ridge in summer during the spawning season. The distribution of preleptocephali (4.2-8.7 mm) was limited to a narrow area around 14°N, 142°E just west of the southern part of the seamount chain, while leptocephali (7.7-62.0 mm) were widely distributed at increasing size westward in the North Equatorial Current (NEC) to the region east of Taiwan. Metamorphosing larvae (52.7-61.2 mm) were collected only in the area 21-26°N, 121-129°E to the east of Taiwan, while glass eels (51.3-61.2 mm) occurred only within or west of the Kuroshio. These distributions suggest that leptocephali begin to metamorphose within or just east of the Kuroshio, then after completion of metamorphosis the glass eels detrain from the current and migrate inshore. The relationship between catch date and body size of leptocephali suggested that the spawning season is from April to August, but further sampling is needed to eliminate possible effects of sampling bias. This analysis is consistent with the existing hypothesis that Japanese eel larvae born near the West Mariana Ridge are transported westward in the NEC and then transfer to the Kuroshio to recruit to East Asia, although more sampling effort is needed for later stage larvae in the NEC bifurcation region to help understand the larval migration in relation to the possible impacts of ocean-atmosphere changes.
KW - Anguilla japonica
KW - Eel larvae
KW - Kuroshio
KW - Larval dispersal
KW - Leptocephali
KW - North Equatorial Current
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U2 - 10.1007/s11160-010-9195-1
DO - 10.1007/s11160-010-9195-1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:79961022540
SN - 0960-3166
VL - 21
SP - 591
EP - 611
JO - Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries
JF - Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries
IS - 3
ER -