1. Changes in physiological and behavioral thermoregulation in juvenile yellowfin tuna, Thunnus albacares, with increasing body size.
- Author
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Hino, Haruhiko, Kitagawa, Takashi, Matsumoto, Takayuki, Aoki, Yoshinori, and Kimura, Shingo
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate changes in the thermoregulatory mechanisms of juvenile yellowfin tuna, Thunnus albacares, with increasing body size by using archival tag data from 28 fish released in Japanese waters (fork length [FL] 35–92 cm). Fish with a body size of 35 cm FL remaining within the surface waters had lower thermal excess (0.4 °C), and fish with a body size of 40–60 cm FL undertaking brief diving at depths > 100 m had higher thermal excess (0.5–1.0 °C). However, the thermal excess did not consistently increase with body size, as has been reported for bigeye tuna. Heat budget models indicated inconsistent trends of decreased or increased heat production with body size. Yellowfin tuna regulate body temperatures by controlling the whole-body heat-transfer coefficient (λ) by 1.2–2.0 fold during descents and ascents, independent of body size, restricting λ for thermo-conservation during descent and increasing λ to absorb ambient heat during ascent. Compared with bigeye tuna, the vertical distributions of juvenile yellowfin tuna were limited to surface waters because of less efficient physiological thermoregulatory mechanisms. However, deep dives exceeding 1000 m, probably for predator avoidance, accompanied by rest in surface waters to recover from unusually higher behavioral activity, and vertical behavior similar to bigeye tuna "characteristic behavior" were observed. Compared to the thermoregulatory mechanisms of other tunas, those of juvenile yellowfin tuna are considered to be adaptive to tropical and subtropical shallower waters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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