Badan Riset dan Inovasi Nasional
07-11-2022
13-08-2024
78d9c861-243d-476e-8c45-2461e05dd7d5
To learn about the larval distributions and reproductive ecologies of marine and...
A sampling survey for leptocephali around Sulawesi Island in the central Indones...
A sampling survey for leptocephali around Sulawesi Island in the central Indones...
Leptocephali of the widely distributed tropical marine eels of the genus Kaupich...
In order to understand biodiversity, distribution, and abundance among the tropi...
INFORMASI: Data berikut ini masih dalam proses pemenuhan Prinsip SDI.
Contrasting Patterns of Growth and Migration of Tropical Anguillid Leptocephali in the Western Pacific and Indonesian Seas
In order to improve understanding of the larval migration and early life history characteristics of 4 tropical eels, Anguilla marmorata, A. bicolor pacifica, A. celebesensis and A. borneensis, the leptocephali, metamorphosing leptocephali and oceanic glass eels collected during 8 cruises in the western Pacific and Indonesian Seas from 1991 to 2002 were analyzed. The leptocephali of A. celebesensis and A. borneensis were collected only in close proximity to their relatively small species ranges in the Indonesian Archipelago and were found to have faster growth than the other 2 species with small-scale local migrations. The more widely distributed species A. marmorata and A. bicolor pacifica were collected in most sampling areas. Small leptocephali of A. marmorata were collected only to the west of the Mariana Islands, and only larger specimens, metamorphosing leptocephali, or oceanic glass eels of both species were collected in the Indonesian Seas. These distributions suggested that the 2 species have intermediate-scale migrations compared to other anguillid eels. The leptocephali of all 4 species appeared to reach a fully grown size of around 50 mm, which is considerably smaller than the maximum size of temperate anguillid leptocephali, and their growth was predominantly faster than that of temperate species. These data and recently derived molecular phylogenetic relationships among all anguillid species in the world suggest that the long spawning migrations of temperate eels evolved from much shorter migrations of tropical species, whose larval growth was faster and whose maximum larval sizes were smaller. Marine Ecology Progress Series, Vol. 309. Hal. 233-246