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Estimation of population fecundity of the bitterling,Rhodeus ocellatus,and ecological significance of its spawning habit into bivalves
Authors:Yoshikazu Nagata
Institution:1. Department of Biology, Osaka Kyoiku University, Jonan 3-1-1, Ikeda City, 563, Osaka, Japan
Abstract:Fluctuations of the population abundance of the rose bitterling,Rhodeus ocellatus (Kner) in a small pond, Shimizu-ike (700 m2), Osaka Prefecture, Japan, were estimated by the Petersen method from 1973 to 1977. The number of fish fluctuated between 12,600 and 46,700 during that period. In 1974, a large reproductive peak in May contributed mainly by 2- and 3-year-old spawners and a small peak in late July contributed by 1–2-year-old fish were observed. Average number of eggs laid in a bivalve,Anodonta woodiana Lea, in each month was estimated with field experiments from March to November, 1974. In total, 93,400 eggs were laid during the first reproductive peak, and 13,100 eggs during the second reproductive peak. The mortality of eggs and larvae incubated in the bivalve was less than 30%, and approximately 70 % of the larvae that had swum out from the host died in the following six months. Thus, it is estimated that approximately 20% of the eggs laid in the bivalves can survive and grow up to reach the first maturity. The high survival rate ofR. ocellatus among cyprinid fishes might be due to the fact that the eggs and larvae are protected from predation by being embedded in a bivalve, and to the fact that the larvae at the earliest free swimming stage have a good opportunity of surviving because they are much larger in size and more developed morphologically than those of other cyprinid fishes.
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