Journal of Marine Science and Engineering (Jul 2021)

The Effect of Low Temperature on the Early Life Stages of the Walleye Pollock, <i>Gadus chalcogrammus</i>—A Laboratory Study

  • Hae-Kyun Yoo,
  • Woo-Jin Kim,
  • Hyung-Jun Lim,
  • Soon-Gyu Byun,
  • Jun Yamamoto,
  • Yasunori Sakurai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse9080818
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
p. 818

Abstract

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The walleye pollock Gadus chalcogrammus is an important commercial species in Japan whose larvae and eggs may be negatively affected by the cold water mass from the coastal Oyashio current that is present in the spawning ground of the Japanese Pacific stock of this species. Therefore, we investigated egg and larval specific density, larval mortality, and behavioral response to temperature change during the ontogenetic development of the walleye pollock to understand the effect of this cold surface water mass (50) was high at 3.1 °C. Below and above this temperature, the D50 showed a decreasing trend. Regarding larval response, at 1.5°C and 5.0°C, newly hatched larvae occurred abundantly in the surface layer, irrespective of the surface and rearing temperatures. When these larvae were released into a thermally stratified water column (surface: 1.5 °C, bottom: 5.0 °C), larvae reared at 5.0 °C with the mouth open and yolk sac completely absorbed moved to the lower layers. However, larvae reared at 1.5 °C remained in the surface layer. These results suggest that the cold water mass could negatively affect larval survival and may limit the escape ability of larvae from unfavorable cold conditions.

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