Rodgveller Cara J, Hutchinson Charles E, Harris Jeremy P, Vulstek Scott C, Guthrie Charles M
Auke Bay Laboratories, Alaska Fisheries Science Center, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service, Juneau, Alaska, United States of America.
Resource Ecology and Fisheries Management Division, Alaska Fisheries Science Center, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Jun 28;12(6):e0180020. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0180020. eCollection 2017.
Fish stocks can be defined by differences in their distribution, life history, and genetics. Managing fish based on stock structure is integral to successful management of a species because fishing may affect stocks disproportionately. Genetic and environmental differences can affect the shape and growth of otoliths and these differences may be indicative of stock structure. To investigate the potential for speciation or stock structure in giant grenadier, Albatrossia pectoralis, we quantified the shape of female giant grenadier otoliths and compared body growth rates for fish with three otolith shapes; shape types were classified visually by an experienced giant grenadier age reader, and were not defined by known distribution or life history differences. We found extreme variation in otolith shape among individuals; however, the shapes were a gradation and not clearly defined into three groups. The two more extreme shapes, visually defined as "hatchet" and "comb", were discernable based on principal component analyses of elliptical Fourier descriptors, and the "mixed" shape overlapped both of the extreme shapes. Fish with hatchet-shaped otoliths grew faster than fish with comb-shaped otoliths. A genetic test (cytochrome c oxidase 1 used by the Fish Barcode of Life Initiative) showed almost no variability among samples, indicating that the samples were all from one species. The lack of young specimens makes it difficult to link otolith shape and growth difference to life history. In addition, shape could not be correlated with adult movement patterns because giant grenadiers experience 100% mortality after capture and, therefore, cannot be tagged and released. Despite these limitations, the link between body growth and otolith shape indicates measurable differences that deserve more study.
鱼类种群可根据其分布、生活史和遗传学差异来定义。基于种群结构管理鱼类是物种成功管理的重要组成部分,因为捕捞可能对不同种群产生不成比例的影响。遗传和环境差异会影响耳石的形状和生长,这些差异可能指示种群结构。为了研究巨 grenadier(Albatrossia pectoralis)的物种形成或种群结构潜力,我们量化了雌性巨 grenadier 耳石的形状,并比较了具有三种耳石形状的鱼的体长生长率;形状类型由一位经验丰富的巨 grenadier 年龄鉴定者通过视觉分类,且未根据已知的分布或生活史差异来定义。我们发现个体间耳石形状存在极大差异;然而,这些形状是渐变的,并未清晰地分为三组。基于椭圆傅里叶描述符的主成分分析,可辨别出两种较为极端的形状,直观上定义为“斧形”和“梳形”,而“混合形”则与这两种极端形状都有重叠。具有斧形耳石的鱼比具有梳形耳石的鱼生长得更快。一项基因检测(生命条形码计划使用的细胞色素 c 氧化酶 1)显示样本间几乎没有变异性,表明所有样本都来自同一物种。缺乏幼体标本使得难以将耳石形状和生长差异与生活史联系起来。此外,形状无法与成年个体的移动模式相关联,因为巨 grenadier 被捕捞后会 100%死亡,因此无法标记并放归。尽管存在这些局限性,但体长生长与耳石形状之间的联系表明存在值得进一步研究的可测量差异。