4.5 Article

Assemblage Structure of Ichthyoplankton Communities in the Southern Adriatic Sea (Eastern Mediterranean)

Journal

BIOLOGY-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biology12111449

Keywords

ichthyoplankton; community structure; spatial distribution; weighted mean depth (WMD); BIONESS; hydrology; southern Adriatic Sea; Otranto Channel; Cyclothone braueri

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Studies on fish early life stages in the southern Adriatic Sea provide information on spawning grounds and nursery areas, contributing to understanding the effects of recruitment variability on stock biomass fluctuations. This study describes the composition, abundance, spatial distribution, and day/night vertical distribution of ichthyoplankton. The results show a high abundance of meso- or bathypelagic species in the upper 100 m, indicating the importance of the epipelagic zone for the development of larval stages of these fish.
Studies based on fish early life stages can provide information on spawning grounds and nursery areas, helping to determine the implications for stock biomass fluctuations of recruitment variability. This study describes the composition, abundance, spatial distribution and differences in day/night vertical distribution of ichthyoplankton in the southern Adriatic Sea. Samples were collected within the framework of the COCONET project (Towards COast to COast NETworks of marine protected areas) from 9 to 18 May 2013 by the R/V Urania, using the electronic multinet EZ-NET BIONESS (Bedford Institute of Oceanography Net Environmental Sampling System). A total of 20 species, belonging to 20 genera and 13 families, were identified. Of the collected larvae, 74.3% were meso- or bathypelagic species, 24.7% were epipelagic and 0.9% were demersal. The community was dominated by Gonostomatidae, followed by Engraulidae, Myctophidae and Photychthaidae. The most abundant species was Cyclothone braueri (45.6%), followed by Engraulis encrasicolus, Ceratoscopelus maderensis, Cyclothone pygmaea, Vinciguerria attenuata and Myctophum punctatum. An inshore/offshore increasing gradient in biodiversity and abundance was observed. Different weighted mean depths (WMDs) were observed for larvae and juveniles. No diel vertical migrations were observed. The high abundance of meso- or bathypelagic species in the upper 100 m confirms the epipelagic zone as an important environment for the development of the larval stages of these fish.

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