Scientific Reports (Sep 2024)

Fisheries shocks provide an opportunity to reveal multiple recruitment sources of sardine in the Sea of Japan

  • Tatsuya Sakamoto,
  • Motomitsu Takahashi,
  • Kotaro Shirai,
  • Tomoya Aono,
  • Toyoho Ishimura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-72925-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract The abrupt decline in sardine catches in the Sea of Japan and the East China Sea (SJ-ECS) in 2014 and 2019 and the recovery in the following years call into question the current assumption that sardines in the SJ-ECS form a self-recruiting subpopulation. To test this hypothesis, we analysed otolith stable oxygen and carbon isotope profiles (δ 18O, δ 13C) of age-0 and age-1 sardines from 2010 and 2013–2015 year-classes captured in the SJ-ECS, as geographic markers for nursery areas. Age-0 sardines generally showed a significant ontogenetic decrease in otolith δ 18O from larval to juvenile stages. However, the majority of age-1 captured in spring 2011, 2015 and 2016 showed non-decreasing otolith δ 18O profiles, suggesting that the age-0 off the Japanese coast were not the main source of recruitment. Different migration groups were thus indicated: the “locals” growing up off the Japanese coast and the migrating “nonlocals”. The isotope profiles of the “nonlocals” overlapped with those of age-0 captured in the subarctic North Pacific, suggesting that they may be migrants from the Pacific, or perhaps an unobserved northward migration group in the SJ-ECS. Our results highlight the considerable uncertainty in the population structure assumed in current stock assessment models for Japanese sardine.

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