• Title/Summary/Keyword: Spawning periodicity

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Spawning Periodicity and Behavior of Amphiprion melanopus and Development of Mass Hatching System for Clownfishes (Cinnamon Clownfish Amphiprion melanopus의 산란 주기, 산란 행동 및 Clownfish류의 부화장치 개발)

  • Noh, Gyeong-Eon;Rho, Sum;Shin, Sang-Ok;Chang, Young-Jin
    • Development and Reproduction
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.133-141
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    • 2011
  • The marine ornamental industry has become a multi-billion dollar industry these days. As developing, however, this industry has been criticized for the indiscriminate captures and the destruction of the surrounding environment. To circumvent these problems, it is suggested to breed the organisms artificially. While clownfishes Amphiprion sp. and Premnas sp. are the most famous ornamental organisms in the trade, few studies are yet available on the culture and commercial production of these fishes. These studies were performed to investigate the spawning periodicity, behavior and the habits during egg incubation, and to provide the information on the mass hatching system. The spawning periodicity and frequency were different in 4 pairs under the constant condition, temperature, salinity and photoperiod. On the contrary, the male's behaviors for egg incubation are almost same in the all. The egg-fanning activity of the male increased as the developing eggs reaching to the hatching day. Based on the above results, we designed a new artificial hatching system, the rotating type (RT), and compared it with the aeration type (AT) and spray type (ST) that were previously described. RT showed higher hatching rate of 87.3% than AT (74.4%) and ST (60.5%). Also, there were no significant differences in the hatching rate regardless of the number (2, 3, 5) of hatching plates. We suggest RT may accommodate various number of hatching plates and constitute a better hatching system for clownfishes.

Sexual Maturation of the Top Shell, Omphalius rusticus (Gastropoda: Trochidae), on the Western Coast of Korea

  • Lee, Ju-Ha
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Fisheries Technology Conference
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    • 2000.10a
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    • pp.244-245
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    • 2000
  • The top shell, Omphalius rusticus (Gastropoda: Trochidae), is marine mollusk inhabiting underneath a rock in the intertidal zone of the coasts of Korea and Japan, and it is one of the edible gastropods. This species is a herbivorous animal. Up to now, there have been some reports on the Trochidae: aspects of classification, spawning periodicity, production, growth and size-frequency distribution of living populations, feeding, reproductive cycle, and induction of larval metamorphosis. (omitted)

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Age Structure and Biomass of the Icefish Pseudochaenichthys georgianus Norman (Channichthyidae) Between 1976 and 2009: a Possible Link to Climate Change

  • Traczyk, Ryszard;Meyer-Rochow, Victor Benno
    • Ocean and Polar Research
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    • v.41 no.4
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    • pp.233-250
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    • 2019
  • A re-assessment of the age structure of the population of the Antarctic icefish Pseudochaenichthys georgianus based on body length data covering the years 1976-2009 and including larvae and postlarvae collected in 1989 and 1990 allowed us to define age groups 0, I, and II as containing fish with respective body lengths of 6-9 cm, 15-27 cm and 27-39 cm. Age at maturity (first spawning) was found to occur in age group III at body lengths that have been falling from 50.1 cm in 1979 to 45.4 cm in 1992. Considering postlarvae together with adult fish, the v. Bertalanffy growth curve parameters were determined as L = 60.62 cm, k = 0.4, t0 = 0.25. Although the reasons for a maturity at shorter body lengths is not fully understood a host of environmental factors like increasing water temperatures and possibly changes in currents, interspecific competition, food availability, etc. are likely to be involved. Global warming (and not primarily overfishing) is likely to have been responsible for the disappearance of larger fish in the surface waters of South Georgia since 1977, for virtually all commercial fishing stopped in the early 1990s. On the other hand, the appearance of numerous younger spawning individuals suggests that larvae do survive in the colder deeper water below 200 m. The biomass of Ps. georgianus oscillates with a 4-year periodicity in contrast to that of the coexisting icefish Chaenocephalus aceratus: the former with a lower biomass in warm years and a higher one in cold years. The biomass of the third species of icefish in the region, i.e. Champsocephalus gunnari, also oscillates, but with a longer periodicity than that involved in the biology of the other two and its biomass increases in contrast to the other two species. The result is that the biomass all three species considered together is rather stable.

Influence of marine environment in main fishing ground and spanwning ground on the squid catch in the East Sea (오징어 산란장 및 주 어장의 해양환경이 동해의 오징어 어획량에 미치는 영향)

  • Lee, Chung-Il;Choi, Kwang-Ho
    • Proceedings of KOSOMES biannual meeting
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    • 2008.05a
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    • pp.143-145
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    • 2008
  • Squid catch in the East Sea has annual, 3-5 years and decadal periodicity. Position of main fishing ground depend on the pattern of the Tsushima Warm Current. Marine environment in spawning ground has close correlation with the variation of squid catch in the East Sea.

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