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1.
N. P. Pakhorukov 《Journal of Ichthyology》2008,48(1):114-123
Results of observations from the underwater inhabited device “Sever-2” of the behavior and distribution of fish on seamounts of the Azores region up to a depth of 1200 m are provided. In the natural habitat, 52 species of fish of 46 genera belonging to 36 families were recorded. In the ichthyofauna of the studied region, bottom (37.0%) and near-bottom (29.2%) species dominate; the proportion of off-bottom and off-bottom-pelagic species is 18.0 and 12.4%, respectively, and pelagic species account for only 3.4%. Pelagic species Scomber japonicus and Trachurus picturatus; off-bottom-pelagic Beryx splendens, Lepidopus caudatus, and Aphanopus carbo; and near-bottom species Zenopsis conchifer, Macrorhamphosus scolapax, Antigonia capros, Capros aper, Anthias anthias, and Callanthias ruber dominate by numbers and the amount of biomass. 相似文献
2.
New records for the shallow-water chiton fauna (Mollusca,Polyplacophora) of the Azores (NE Atlantic)
Published records, original data from recent field work on all of the islands of the Azores (NE Atlantic), and a revision of the entire mollusc collection deposited in the Department of Biology of the University of the Azores (DBUA) were used to compile a checklist of the shallow-water Polyplacophora of the Azores. Lepidochitona cf. canariensis and Tonicella rubra are reported for the first time for this archipelago, increasing the recorded Azorean fauna to seven species. 相似文献
3.
Synopsis Demersal fish communities associated with hard bottom habitats in the South Atlantic Bight were investigated in three depth
zones (inner, middle and outer shelf) between 30° and 33°N latitudes. Fishes were sampled with trawls and baited fishing gear,
and were observed by remotely operated underwater television. Most demersal hard bottom fishes demonstrated seasonal differences
in abundance in each depth zone, especially at the inner and outer shelf stations. Diversity values from trawl catches were
higher in winter than summer at inner and outer shelf stations, but lower in winter at middle shelf stations. Species richness
was higher in summer than in winter at most stations, but H' diversity patterns were more influenced by community evenness.
Diversity values were higher than those reported for similar depths in the Middle Atlantic Bight. Mean biomass of demersal
teleosts for all stations combined was slightly greater in winter than in summer. There was no significant difference in biomass
between stations in summer, however, middle shelf stations had significantly greater biomass than inner or outer shelf stations
in winter. Biomass estimates from the hard bottom areas studied were considerably higher than those reported in the literature
for sand bottom areas in the South Atlantic Bight, but less than those reported for tropical reefs. Cluster analysis revealed
differences in community composition between day and night trawl tows at all stations, and greater seasonal differences in
species composition at inner and outer shelf stations than at middle shelf depths. Underwater television provided useful complementary
data to trawl catches, documented the presence of large fishes which avoided the trawl, and provided information on the community
composition at high relief stations which could not be trawled. 相似文献
4.
ABSTRACTElasmobranchs are a vulnerable resource, more susceptible to overfishing than most teleosts, and their assessment is complicated due to a general lack of information about their fisheries, biology and ecology. This study aimed to analyse all fishery and survey data available for elasmobranchs caught over the past c. 25 years around the Azores (NE Atlantic) to provide a baseline information, which can be used to inform stock assessment and management strategies. Elasmobranch species covered pelagic, benthopelagic and demersal habitats, from shallow to deep-water strata in areas around the islands and seamounts. These species are taken accidentally as by-catch of three main fisheries: swordfish fishery, black scabbardfish fishery and demersal bottom longline fishery. The latter represents one of the most important fishing activities in the Azores, and frequent elasmobranch by-catches include Raja clavata, Galeorhinus galeus, Deania calcea, D. profundorum, Etmopterus pusillus and E. spinax. A slight reduction in the abundance indices of these species was observed, despite the implemented technical measures (e.g. minimum size, zero catch). Little is known about resource dynamics for the Azorean region and no analytical assessments have been conducted. This study highlights the vulnerability to overfishing of these resources and the urgent need to develop management strategies. 相似文献
5.
Demersal fish assemblages in the Southern California Bight based on visual surveys in deep water 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Between 1995 and 2006, manned submersible fish surveys were conducted on the sea floor throughout the Southern California
Bight. A total of 401 dives (comprising 1,015 transects and 14,373 habitat patches) were made in waters between 19 and 365 m
deep. All natural habitat types were included, although both soft sea floors and rocky reefs were surveyed more than any other
type. A total of 717,526 fishes, representing a minimum of 137 species and 47 families, were observed. Rockfishes (genus Sebastes), with a minimum of 50 species and 647,495 individuals (90.2% of all fishes observed), dominated most of the habitats. The
most abundant species, squarespot (Sebastes hopkinsi), halfbanded (Sebastes semicinctus), shortbelly (Sebastes jordani), and pygmy rockfishes (Sebastes wilsoni), are dwarf taxa that either school or aggregate. The most abundant non-rockfish species was the benthic and territorial
blackeye goby (Rhinogobiops nicholsii). Both species richness and overall fish densities were highest in the shallowest sites. Most of the fishes in all habitats
were small (≤20 cm TL long) and economically important species were generally uncommon. Forty-four species were found to be
characteristic of the study area (occurring in at least 5% of the transects) and these species formed three faunal associations
centered around depths of 62, 105, and 168 m. Based on size frequency distributions, at least 18 of the characteristic species
exhibited ontogenetic movements, with young-of-the-year and older juveniles living in relatively shallow waters and larger
individuals generally in deeper depths. In this study, the abundance of juvenile widow rockfish (Sebastes entomelas), and the virtual absence of adults, in southern California waters may demonstrate an ontogenetic northward movement of this
species. This research implies that substantial harvesting of larger species by commercial and recreational fishers has helped
alter some fish assemblages, allowing small and “weedy” species to thrive.
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
相似文献
Milton S. LoveEmail: |
6.
Rafael Bañón Alejandro de Carlos Susana Ruiz-Pico Francisco Baldó 《Journal of fish biology》2020,97(3):908-913
Four specimens corresponding to three rare deep-water fish species were caught on the Porcupine Bank (Northeast Atlantic) in September 2019. These catches include the new northernmost records of Azores rockling Gaidropsarus granti and deep-water dab Poecilopsetta beanii in the Atlantic Ocean and the second record of the latter species in its eastern zone. Three of the specimens were retained and their molecular identification also allowed the Cataetyx alleni DNA barcode to be obtained for the first time. The appearance of P. beanii, a West Atlantic species, in its eastern zone is discussed in relation to a possible phenomenon of transoceanic drift in the larval stage. 相似文献
7.
The efficient investment of resources and effort into conservation strategies depends on the accurate identification of management units. At the same time, understanding the processes by which population structure evolves requires an understanding of the conditions under which panmixia may exist. Here, we study a species with an unusual, apparently sex-biased pattern of distribution, and test the hypothesis that distribution processes associated with this pattern (for example, congregating at a single dominant spawning site or periodic mixing during reproduction) could lead to panmixia over a large geographic range. Using 13 microsatellite markers, we compared 393 blue hake (Antimora rostrata) from 11 sample sites across a geographic range of over 3000 km, and found no evidence of population structure. We estimated current effective population size and found it to be large (∼15 000) across the sampled area. In addition, we used simulation models to test expectations about demographic correlation among populations and our ability to detect relevant levels of gene flow. All data were consistent with the interpretation of long-range panmixia. 相似文献
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P. A. Tyler S. K. Bronsdon C. M. Young A. L. Rice 《International Review of Hydrobiology》1995,80(2):187-199
Four putative species of the seapen genus Umbellula, U. lindahli, U. thomsonii, U. durissima and U. monocephalus, are found at bathyal and abyssal depths in the Porcupine Seabight and Abyssal Plain in the NE Atlantic Ocean and at bathyal depths off the Bahamas. The most common species, U. lindahli, has a cosmopolitan distribution in the world ocean. In situ observations, from bathyal depths in the Bahamas, of the posture of U. lindahli show that the polyps are spread out to maximize particle capture from the water column. In addition, the individuals of U. lindahli from the Bahamas suggest that the tentacles are cropped by a predator, but there is no evidence of predation in the NE Atlantic specimens. Reproduction in U. lindahli is typical of that previously observed in pennatulids. Fecundity is high, although most of the oocytes present are previtellogenic with only a few developing through to maximum size at any one time. Some specimens of U. lindahli appear to be infested with a small flatworm. 相似文献
10.
The deep-sea soft-sediment environment hosts a diverse and highly endemic fauna of uncertain origin. We know little about how this fauna evolved because geographic patterns of genetic variation, the essential information for inferring patterns of population differentiation and speciation are poorly understood. Using formalin-fixed specimens from archival collections, we quantify patterns of genetic variation in the protobranch bivalve Deminucula atacellana, a species widespread throughout the Atlantic Ocean at bathyal and abyssal depths. Samples were taken from 18 localities in the North American, West European and Argentine basins. A hypervariable region of mitochondrial 16S rDNA was amplified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and sequenced from 130 individuals revealing 21 haplotypes. Except for several important exceptions, haplotypes are unique to each basin. Overall gene diversity is high (h = 0.73) with pronounced population structure (Phi(ST) = 0.877) and highly significant geographic associations (P < 0.0001). Sequences cluster into four major clades corresponding to differences in geography and depth. Genetic divergence was much greater among populations at different depths within the same basin, than among those at similar depths but separated by thousands of kilometres. Isolation by distance probably explains much of the interbasin variation. Depth-related divergence may reflect historical patterns of colonization or strong environmental selective gradients. Broadly distributed deep-sea organisms can possess highly genetically divergent populations, despite the lack of any morphological divergence. 相似文献
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Arthur de Barros Bauer Luciano Gomes Fischer Fabio Di Dario Michael Maia Mincarone 《Marine Biology Research》2017,13(8):813-831
The Santana Archipelago (22°23′S, 41°42′W) is located at the northern limit of the South Brazil Bight in Southeastern Brazil, a major topographic feature of the South American continental shelf relevant in terms of fisheries, biogeography and conservation. Herein, the first inventory of the ichthyofauna of the Santana Archipelago is presented, with information on the distribution and conservation status of 147 species of the Teleostei and Elasmobranchii. Sampling was performed during 15 field expeditions between March 2013 and November 2015. A total of 6931 specimens were collected using bottom trawl, beach seine, hand net and scuba diving. Records of 28 species were based on photographs, and five species were recorded through underwater sighting. The Elasmobranchii was represented by nine species in eight families and six orders, and the Teleostei by 138 species in 54 families and 26 orders. Previous records of fishes from the Archipelago consist of 18 species deposited in fish collections; therefore, 129 species are reported herein for the first time. Most (114, 77.5%) species have large geographic distributions (western Atlantic: 81 species, 55.1%; eastern and western Atlantic: 33 species, 22.4%), but seven recorded species (4.8%) are endemic to the Brazilian Province. At the Global (IUCN) level, 12 species (8.1%) are threatened with extinction. Thirteen (8.8%) species are also considered as threatened at the Regional (Brazilian) level. These results highlight the relevance of the Santana Archipelago in the Brazilian conservationist context. Possible threats to the ichtyofauna of the Archipelago are discussed, and effective measures of conservation are presented. 相似文献
13.
MARTIN A. COLLINS 《Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society》2003,139(1):93-127
The systematics and distribution of the cirrate octopod genus Grimpoteuthis in the north-east Atlantic are reviewed. Three new species are described and Grimpoteuthis wuelkeri (Grimpe, 1920) is redescribed. A new generic diagnosis is proposed. Five species of Grimpoteuthis are recognized in the north-east Atlantic. The type species, G. umbellata (Fisher, 1883) is known only from the type specimen, which is in such poor condition that comparison with recently captured material was not possible. G. wuelkeri is a large, slope species, caught between 1600 m and 2200 m in the north-east and north-west Atlantic. Of the three new species, both G. boylei and G. challengeri are large abyssal species. G. boylei is found in the north-east Atlantic at the Porcupine Abyssal Plain (PAP) and the Madeira Abyssal Plain and may be found at abyssal depths throughout the north-east Atlantic. G. challengeri is known from the PAP, with a single specimen from the north-west Atlantic. G. discoveryi is a small, lower slope and abyssal species found in the north-east Atlantic. The Grimpoteuthis species can be separated based on shell form, presence of a radula and posterior salivary glands, arrangement of suckers and cirri and gill morphology. Two species, G. megaptera Verrill and G. plena Verrill, have been described from the north-west Atlantic, but the types are either lost ( G. megaptera ) or in poor condition ( G. plena ), hindering comparisons. Material examined from the north-west Atlantic included G. wuelkeri , G. challengeri and at least two other species. © 2003 The Linnean Society of London, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society , 2003, 139 , 93−127. 相似文献
14.
《Acta Oecologica》1999,20(4):353-362
Sled and box-corer samplings were performed at two sites in the Capbreton canyon in order to appreciate the influence of near-bottom environmental conditions on the structure of their macrobenthic communities (crustaceans). Although located at similar depths (ca. 1 000 m), these two sites were characterised by different physicochemical conditions at the sediment-water interface, probably related with the morphology of the submarine valley (reduced environment, oxygen depletion and stagnation of bottom water at site A; normal oceanic conditions on the near-bottom environment of site B). The analysis of the collected fauna revealed a low similarity between the two sites, mainly due to the unusual dominance of three epibenthic species in sled samples from site A: the amphipod Bonnierella abyssorum, the tanaid Apseudes spinosus and the isopod Arcturopsis giardi. Due to their apparent rarity or absence in adjacent non-canyon communities, such epibenthic crustaceans may be considered as `canyon indicator species' able to exhibit abundant populations within the peculiar confinement area of this canyon. 相似文献
15.
The occurrence, habitat and abundance are reported for the population of ocean triggerfish Canthidermis sufflamen (Balistidae) at El Hierro, Canary Islands. This is the first record from the Eastern Atlantic. 相似文献
16.
Giuliana Panieri 《Geobios》2005,38(2):247
Recent benthic foraminiferal assemblages in surface sediments of the Rockall Trough (NE Atlantic) have been qualitatively and quantitatively studied in order to investigate the effects of hydrocarbon seepage on benthic foraminiferal populations. Species diversity and abundance data have been examined in samples of similar lithology collected from hydrocarbon seep and non-seep (control) areas at a water depth of about 1000 m. Three species groups with different environmental preferences can be recognized. Group 1 dominates seep samples, and includes species tolerant to hydrocarbon emission, especially Angulogerina bradyana. In contrast, the less tolerant Group 2 species are weakly represented at seeps but dominate control samples. Group 3 species occur in low frequencies in both seep and non-seep samples. Furthermore, the measurement of species diversity (Shannon-Wiener and Simpson indices) demonstrates a difference in foraminiferal occurrence and frequencies between the seep and non-seep sites. Thus, the benthic foraminiferal distribution pattern is guided by different sensitivities of the species to hydrocarbons, reduced bottom-water oxygen usually associated with seepage and/or to a relatively elevated organic matter content in the sediment. 相似文献
17.
Length-weight relationships for seven fish species caught from tidepools in an intertidal rocky shore in the Gulf of Cadiz are presented. Fish were sampled monthly (April 2008–January 2012), using hand nets (mesh size 1.5 mm). The values of b parameter remained within the expected range of 2.5–3.5 for all fish species. An ANCOVA test was used to evaluate differences in the b growth parameter between females and males. Gobius cobitis, G. incognitus and G. paganellus showed significant differences in the parameters of the length-weight relationships according to the sex. 相似文献
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Disentangling the genetic and morphological structure of Patella candei complex in Macaronesia (NE Atlantic) 下载免费PDF全文
Joao Faria Gustavo M. Martins Alfonso Pita Pedro A. Ribeiro Stephen J. Hawkins Pablo Presa Ana I. Neto 《Ecology and evolution》2017,7(16):6125-6140
The uptake of natural living resources for human consumption has triggered serious changes in the balance of ecosystems. In the archipelagos of Macaronesia (NE Atlantic), limpets have been extensively exploited probably since islands were first colonized. This has led to profound consequences in the dynamics of rocky shore communities. The Patella candei complex includes various subspecies of limpets that are ascribed to a particular archipelago and has been the focus of several taxonomic surveys without much agreement. Under a conservational perspective, we apply morphometric and genetic analyses to test subspecies boundaries in P. candei and to evaluate its current population connectivity throughout Macaronesia (Azores, Madeira, and Canaries). A highly significant genetic break between archipelagos following isolation by distance was detected (FST = 0.369, p < .001). Contrastingly, significant genetic differentiation among islands (i.e., Azores) was absent possibly indicating ongoing gene flow via larval exchange between populations. Significant shell‐shape differences among archipelagos were also detected using both distance‐based and geometric morphometric analyses. Adaptive processes associated with niche differentiation and strong barriers to gene flow among archipelagos may be the mechanisms underlying P. candei diversification in Macaronesia. Under the very probable assumption that populations of P. candei from each archipelago are geographically and/or ecologically isolated populations, the various subspecies within the P. candei complex may be best thought of as true species using the denomination: P. candei in Selvagens, Patella gomesii in Azores, Patella ordinaria in Madeira, and Patella crenata for Canaries. This would be in agreement with stock delimitation and units of conservation of P. candei sensu latu along Macaronesia. 相似文献