{"title":"Revisiting the role of early life growth for survival potential in three clupeoid species","authors":"Shota Tanaka, Shizuna Togoshi, Naotaka Yasue, Corinne M. Burns, Dominique Robert, Akinori Takasuka","doi":"10.1111/fog.12626","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Johan Hjort's “critical period” hypothesis, which postulates that year-class strength is determined in the short period following the onset of exogenous feeding, has rarely been supported by empirical data. Instead, the current understanding is that recruitment is determined by cumulative mortality throughout early life. Recent studies relied on the measure of growth autocorrelation derived from otolith daily increment widths to test the link between growth rate achieved during the post-hatch period and during subsequent phases of the larval stage. Based on this approach, we revisit the role of larval growth in driving survival potential in three clupeoid species: Japanese sardine <i>Sardinops melanostictus</i>, Japanese anchovy <i>Engraulis japonicus</i>, and Pacific round herring <i>Etrumeus micropus</i> throughout the larval stage, using a combination of published datasets of otolith increment widths. Strong growth autocorrelation was detected for all three species throughout the larval stage, suggesting that initial growth determines to some extent growth rates achieved later in life. The extent of autocorrelation was reduced in sardine relative to anchovy and round herring at older ages. This interspecific difference could be attributed to differences in sensitivity to variability of environmental factors such as water temperature and food availability. The present findings suggest that the effect of early growth rate persists into later life stages for driving survival potential, which could reconcile the classic concept of “critical period” and the current “growth–survival” paradigm.</p>","PeriodicalId":51054,"journal":{"name":"Fisheries Oceanography","volume":"32 2","pages":"245-254"},"PeriodicalIF":1.9000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Fisheries Oceanography","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/fog.12626","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"FISHERIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Johan Hjort's “critical period” hypothesis, which postulates that year-class strength is determined in the short period following the onset of exogenous feeding, has rarely been supported by empirical data. Instead, the current understanding is that recruitment is determined by cumulative mortality throughout early life. Recent studies relied on the measure of growth autocorrelation derived from otolith daily increment widths to test the link between growth rate achieved during the post-hatch period and during subsequent phases of the larval stage. Based on this approach, we revisit the role of larval growth in driving survival potential in three clupeoid species: Japanese sardine Sardinops melanostictus, Japanese anchovy Engraulis japonicus, and Pacific round herring Etrumeus micropus throughout the larval stage, using a combination of published datasets of otolith increment widths. Strong growth autocorrelation was detected for all three species throughout the larval stage, suggesting that initial growth determines to some extent growth rates achieved later in life. The extent of autocorrelation was reduced in sardine relative to anchovy and round herring at older ages. This interspecific difference could be attributed to differences in sensitivity to variability of environmental factors such as water temperature and food availability. The present findings suggest that the effect of early growth rate persists into later life stages for driving survival potential, which could reconcile the classic concept of “critical period” and the current “growth–survival” paradigm.
Johan Hjort的“关键时期”假说认为,年级强度是在外源喂养开始后的短时间内决定的,这一假说很少得到实证数据的支持。相反,目前的理解是,招募是由生命早期的累积死亡率决定的。最近的研究依赖于耳石日增宽的生长自相关性测量来测试孵化后和幼虫期后续阶段的生长速度之间的联系。基于这种方法,我们利用已发表的耳石增长宽度数据集,重新研究了三种clupeids物种:日本沙丁鱼(Sardinops melanotictus)、日本凤尾鱼(Engraulis japonicus)和太平洋圆鲱鱼(Etrumeus micropus)在整个幼虫期的幼虫生长在驱动生存潜力中的作用。在整个幼虫阶段,所有三种都检测到很强的生长自相关性,这表明初始生长在一定程度上决定了生命后期的生长速度。年龄较大时,沙丁鱼相对于凤尾鱼和圆鲱鱼的自相关程度降低。这种种间差异可归因于对水温和食物供应等环境因素的敏感性差异。本研究结果表明,早期生长速率对生存潜力的影响持续到生命后期,这可以调和经典的“关键时期”概念和当前的“生长-生存”范式。
期刊介绍:
The international journal of the Japanese Society for Fisheries Oceanography, Fisheries Oceanography is designed to present a forum for the exchange of information amongst fisheries scientists worldwide.
Fisheries Oceanography:
presents original research articles relating the production and dynamics of fish populations to the marine environment
examines entire food chains - not just single species
identifies mechanisms controlling abundance
explores factors affecting the recruitment and abundance of fish species and all higher marine tropic levels