Progress in Fishery Sciences (Aug 2024)

Coexistence of Freshwater Resident and Anadromous Coilia nasus in the Anqing Section of the Yangtze River in Anhui Province, China

  • Ying XU,
  • Tao JIANG,
  • Jian YANG,
  • Hongbo LIU,
  • Xiubao CHEN

DOI
https://doi.org/10.19663/j.issn2095-9869.20230411002
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 45, no. 4
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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The Anqing section of the Yangtze (Changjiang) River in Anhui Province, China, is one of the most important migratory routes and distribution of the highly valued diadromous estuarine tapertail anchovy Coilia nasus. In the past, this section has suffered a severe loss of C. nasus resources caused by human activities, especially overfishing and water pollution. Since 2019, a fishing ban policy for the species in the Yangtze River has been introduced in China for resource restoration. Otoliths are calcium carbonate structures, and otolith microchemistry can provide detailed life history information that can be used to compare habitat use between different saline water bodies. To study the habitat history of C. nasus in the Anqing section of the Yangtze River after the implementation of the fishing ban, we examined the microchemical characteristics (Sr and Ca) of otoliths from the long (previously named C. ectenes) and short maxillary (previously named C. brachygnathus) types of anchovy using electron probe X-ray microanalysis (EPMA). Line-transect analysis of Sr/Ca ratios suggested that the short maxillary type of C. nasus could be divided into two groups. The otolith Sr/Ca ratios (calculated and expressed as Sr/Ca ×1, 000) of one group were always 3.0, believed to be indicative of a brackish or seawater habitat), indicating that anchovies not only have a freshwater habitat history with low salinity but also a brackish habitat history with high salinity. The latter group of anchovies were typically anadromous C. nasus, as the Sr/Ca ratio of the otoliths of C. nasus fluctuated significantly and coincided with variations between freshwater and estuarine brackish or seawater (i.e., anchovies experienced not only freshwater habitats but also brackish water habitats at different stages of their life history). The Sr content mapping of EPMA with different color patterns for freshwater (blue), brackish water (green-yellow) and seawater (red) habitats also confirmed the results obtained from the line-transect analysis. Our results demonstrated that the population composition of C. nasus in the Anqing section of the Yangtze river became complex, and there was coexistence of freshwater resident and anadromous C. nasus in the Anqing section of the Yangtze River in Anhui Province, China (i.e., freshwater resident and anadromous short maxillary and anadromous long maxillary type C. nasus). This phenomenon may suggest a restoration of C. nasus resource diversity after the implementation of the fishing ban in the Anqing section of the Yangtze River.

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