4.2 Article

Seasonal patterns in the nocturnal distribution and behavior of the mesopelagic fish Maurolicus muelleri at high latitudes

Journal

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
Volume 521, Issue -, Pages 189-200

Publisher

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps11139

Keywords

Behavior; Diel vertical migration; Light levels; Mesopelagic; Acoustics

Funding

  1. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Acoustic scattering layers (SL) ascribed to pearlside Maurolicus muelleri were studied in Masfjorden, Norway, using upward-looking echo sounders cabled to shore for continuous long-term measurements. The acoustic studies were accompanied by continuous measurements of surface light and supplemented with intermittent field campaigns. From autumn to spring, young M. muelleri formed an SL in the upper similar to 75 to 150 m in the daytime, characterized by migration to near-surface water near dusk, subsequent 'midnight sinking', followed by a dawn ascent before a return to the daytime habitat. Light levels were similar to 1 order of magnitude lower during the dawn ascent than for ascent in the afternoon, with the latter terminating before fish reached upper layers on similar to 1/3 of the nights from late November to mid-April. Adults showed less tendency of migration during autumn and winter, until the SLs of young and adults merged in late spring, and thereafter displayed coherent migration behavior. The midnight sinking became progressively deeper from autumn to winter but was strongly reduced from mid-May when the darkest nocturnal light intensity (PAR) at the surface was above 10(-3) mu mol m(-2) s(-1). The pearlside took on schooling in upper waters during the even lighter nights in early June, with minimum light of similar to 5 x 10(-3) to 10(-1) mu mol m(-2) s(-1) at the surface. Nocturnal schooling ceased in early July, and midnight sinking reappeared in mid-August. We suggest that the strong variation in nocturnal light intensity at high latitudes provides changing trade-offs between visual foraging and avoiding predators and hence varying time budgets for feeding in the upper, productive layers.

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