Length Structure of Deep-Pelagic Fishes Sheds New Light to their Life Histories

  • M. Heino
  • , David S. Boukal
  • , Tone Falkenhaug
  • , Uwe Piatkowski
  • , F. M. Porteiro
  • , Tracey Sutton

Research output: Contribution to conferencePresentation

Abstract

Here we use a new technique to study life history variation in deep-pelagic fishes from a mid-ocean ridge system. Shape of length distribution in a population is to a significant extent determined by the degree to which an average individual approaches its asymptotic maximum size. Analysing the material from the pelagic trawl hauls taken during the 2004 Mar-Eco expedition along the northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge, we show that length distributions in many deep-pelagic fish species are characterised by negative skew (the left tail of the distribution is longer). In other words, a large proportion of individuals had a size close to species-specific maximum size. Provided that our sampling can be considered representative, this finding suggests that deep-pelagic fishes have a low mortality rate relative to the rate at which they grow towards their asymptotic size.

Original languageAmerican English
StatePublished - Jan 1 2008

Disciplines

  • Marine Biology
  • Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology

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