20 results on '"Cailliet GM"'
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2. Ichthyofauna on three seamounts off southern and central California, USA
- Author
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Lundsten, L, primary, McClain, CR, additional, Barry, JP, additional, Cailliet, GM, additional, Clague, DA, additional, and DeVogelaere, AP, additional
- Published
- 2009
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3. The artisanal elasmobranch fishery on the east coast of Baja California, Mexico: Characteristics and management considerations
- Author
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Smith, WD, primary, Bizzarro, JJ, additional, and Cailliet, GM, additional
- Published
- 2009
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4. Benthic invertebrate communities on three seamounts off southern and central California, USA
- Author
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Lundsten, L, primary, Barry, JP, additional, Cailliet, GM, additional, Clague, DA, additional, DeVogelaere, AP, additional, and Geller, JB, additional
- Published
- 2009
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5. A classification scheme for deep seafloor habitats
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Greene, Hg, Yoklavich, Mm, Starr, Rm, O'Connell, Vm, Wakefield, Ww, Sullivan, De, Mcrea, Je, Cailliet, Gm, Greene, Hg, Yoklavich, Mm, Starr, Rm, O'Connell, Vm, Wakefield, Ww, Sullivan, De, Mcrea, Je, and Cailliet, Gm
- Abstract
A standard, universally useful classification scheme for deepwater habitats needs to be established so that descriptions of these habitats can be accurately and efficiently applied among scientific disciplines. In recent years many marine benthic habitats in deep water have been described using geophysical and biological data. These descriptions can vary from one investigator to another, which makes it difficult to compare habitats and associated biological assemblages among geographic regions. Using geophysical data collected with a variety of remote sensor systems and in situ biological and geologic observations, we have constructed a classification scheme that can be used in describing marine benthic habitats in deep water., Un système de classification des habitats benthiques profonds, pour avoir valeur de référence générale, doit pouvoir être mis en pratique avec précision et efficacité dans les disciplines scientifiques. Ces dernières années, les habitats marins benthiques profonds ont été décrits à partir de données géophysiques et biologiques; les descriptions varient d'un chercheur à l'autre, rendant la comparaison difficile entre les habitats et les populations de différentes régions géographiques. Des données géophysiques obtenues par plusieurs systèmes de détection à distance, et des observations biologiques et géologiques in situ, ont permis d'établir une classification qui est proposée pour décrire les habitats marins benthiques en eau profonde.
- Published
- 1999
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6. Fish faunal and habitat analyses using trawls, camera sleds and submersibles in benthic deep-sea habitats off central California
- Author
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Cailliet, Gm, Andrews, Ah, Wakefield, Ww, Moreno, G, Rhodes, Kl, Cailliet, Gm, Andrews, Ah, Wakefield, Ww, Moreno, G, and Rhodes, Kl
- Abstract
Beam trawl, camera sled and submersible data from 2 000-3 300 m off central California produced similar fish faunal composition, but different density estimates. All species caught in trawls were observed in camera-sled and submersible observations. However, some rare species that were observed were not caught in trawls. The fish fauna was dominated by the families Macrouridae, Zoarcidae, Moridae, and Rajidae. Fishes both trawled and observed were the macrourids Coryphaenoides armatus, C. filifer and C. leptolepis; the zoarcids Bothrocara spp., Pachycara lepinium and Lycenchelys spp.; the morid Antimora microlepis; the rajid Bathyraja trachura, the ophidiid Spectrunculus grandis, and the liparidid Careproctus ovigerum. One unidentified liparidid (Paraliparis sp.) and two unidentified Lycenchelys spp. were trawled and may have been seen but also could not be identified to species from photographs. Observed only in photographs were the liparidids Paraliparis rosaceus and Careproctus melanurus, synodontid Bathysaurus mollis, and noto-canthid Notacanthus chemnitzii. These three techniques differed in their ability to provide specimens for accurate identification, counts, and later life history (feeding habit, age and growth, and reproduction) studies, and to provide information on dispersion, habitat utilization, behavior and interactions. Accurate density estimates were undoubtedly hampered by trawl and camera sled avoidance, escape, and uncertainties concerning the area trawled. Camera sleds produced higher (and perhaps better) estimates of density. Submersible observations from the DSV Alvin produced a similar species list but little additional, quantitative information. Both visual techniques allowed habitat characterization, but no strong faunal associations with habitat types were observed., La faune des poissons a été étudiée entre 2 000 et 3 300 m de profondeur au large de la Californie centrale, par trois méthodes : chalutage, photographie et observation à partir d'un submersible. Les compositions faunistiques obtenues sont similaires, mais les densités diffèrent. Toutes les espèces prélevées au chalut ont été observées sur photographie et par submersible ; en revanche, quelques espèces observées sont absentes du chalut. Les résultats montrent la dominance des familles Macrouridae, Zoarcidae, Moridae et Rajidae. Poissons chalutés et observés : macrouridés Coryphaenoides armatus, C. filifer et C. leptolepis ; zoarcidés Bothrocara spp., Pachycara lepinium et Lycenchelys spp. ; moridéAntimora microlepis ; rajidé Bathyraja trachura, ophidiidéSpectrunculus grandis et liparididé Careproctus ovigerum. Poissons chalutés qui n'ont pu être identifiés sur les photographies : un liparididé (Paraliparis sp.) et deux Lycenchelys spp. Poissons observés uniquement sur les photographies : liparididés Paraliparis rosaceus et Care proctus melanurus, synodontidéBathysaurus mollis et notocanthidé Notacanthus chemnitzii. Les trois techniques diffèrent par la possibilité de disposer de specimens pour l'identification, les comptages et l'étude des conditions de vie (alimentation, âge et croissance, reproduction) et par les informations qu'elles fournissent sur la dispersion, l'habitat, le comportement et les interactions. Les estimations précises de la densité sont certainement biaisées par ce qui échappe au chalut ou au balayage photographique, par la fuite des poissons et par les incertitudes sur la surface chalutée. Le balayage photographique donne les valeurs de densité les plus fortes (et probablement les meilleures). Les observations par le submersible Alvin donnent une liste similaire des espèces et ajoutent peu d'information quantitative. Les deux techniques visuelles ont permis de caractériser l'habitat, mais il n'a pas été observé de forte association entre la fau
- Published
- 1999
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7. Demography of the central california population of the Leopard Shark (Triakis semifasciata)
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Cailliet, GM, primary
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- 1992
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8. Growth and demography of the Pacific Angle Shark (Squatina californica), based upon tag returns off California
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Cailliet, GM, primary, Mollet, HF, additional, Pittenger, GG, additional, Bedford, D, additional, and Natanson, LJ, additional
- Published
- 1992
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9. Age and growth of three endemic threatened guitarfishes Pseudobatos horkelii, P. percellens and Zapteryx brevirostris in the western South Atlantic Ocean.
- Author
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Caltabellotta FP, Siders ZA, Murie DJ, Motta FS, Cailliet GM, and Gadig OBF
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- Animals, Atlantic Ocean, Body Size, Female, Male, Seasons, Skates, Fish growth & development, Spine anatomy & histology, Spine growth & development, Endangered Species, Skates, Fish physiology
- Abstract
The age and growth of three endemic threatened guitarfish species were analysed using vertebrae of Pseudobatos horkelii, P. percellens and Zapteryx brevirostris. Edge and marginal-increment analyses were used to evaluate the periodicity of the formation of the band-pairs, suggesting deposition of one band-pair per year, from late winter to late spring. The von Bertalanffy growth model was used to describe the growth of these species with the following parameters, for pooled sexes: P. horkelii L
∞ = 126.93, k = 0.19 and t0 = -1.51; P. percellens L∞ = 109.31, k = 0.16 and t0 = -1.78; Z. brevirostris L∞ = 60.37, k = 0.24 and t0 = -1.42. Our results are essential to understanding the resilience and vulnerability of these species to harvest, which can contribute to management and conservation actions of these species., (© 2019 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles.)- Published
- 2019
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10. Perspectives on elasmobranch life-history studies: a focus on age validation and relevance to fishery management.
- Author
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Cailliet GM
- Subjects
- Aging, Animals, Elasmobranchii growth & development, Population Dynamics, Elasmobranchii physiology, Fisheries methods, Reproduction
- Abstract
Life-history (age, growth, age validation, reproduction and demography) studies of elasmobranchs date back to the middle of the last century with major early contributions made by British fishery scientists. As predicted by Holden in the early 1970s, many sharks and rays can be vulnerable to fishery mortality because they grow slowly, mature late in life, reproduce infrequently, have relatively low fecundities and can have relatively long life spans. As has now been found, however, not all species exhibit these traits. Also, ageing structures (neural arches and caudal thorns), other than vertebrae and spines, have since been evaluated. Various methods for validating age and growth estimates have been developed and tested on numerous species of elasmobranchs. These include tag-recapture analyses, oxytetracycline injections, centrum or spine edge and marginal increment analyses, and bomb radiocarbon dating of calcified structures. Application of these techniques has sometimes not only validated relatively slow growth and long life span estimates, but also has produced other results. A brief historical perspective on the applications and limitations of these techniques for elasmobranchs is provided, along with a discussion of selected species for which these techniques worked well, did not work at all or have produced variable and conflicting results. Because many fishery management techniques utilize age or stage-specific information, often through demographic analyses, accurate information on the life histories of fished populations, especially age validation, is extremely important for the fishery management of these cartilaginous fishes., (© 2015 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles.)
- Published
- 2015
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11. A re-evaluation of the size of the white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) population off California, USA.
- Author
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Burgess GH, Bruce BD, Cailliet GM, Goldman KJ, Grubbs RD, Lowe CG, MacNeil MA, Mollet HF, Weng KC, and O'Sullivan JB
- Subjects
- Animals, California, Female, Male, Models, Theoretical, Pacific Ocean, Population Density, Endangered Species, Sharks
- Abstract
White sharks are highly migratory and segregate by sex, age and size. Unlike marine mammals, they neither surface to breathe nor frequent haul-out sites, hindering generation of abundance data required to estimate population size. A recent tag-recapture study used photographic identifications of white sharks at two aggregation sites to estimate abundance in "central California" at 219 mature and sub-adult individuals. They concluded this represented approximately one-half of the total abundance of mature and sub-adult sharks in the entire eastern North Pacific Ocean (ENP). This low estimate generated great concern within the conservation community, prompting petitions for governmental endangered species designations. We critically examine that study and find violations of model assumptions that, when considered in total, lead to population underestimates. We also use a Bayesian mixture model to demonstrate that the inclusion of transient sharks, characteristic of white shark aggregation sites, would substantially increase abundance estimates for the adults and sub-adults in the surveyed sub-population. Using a dataset obtained from the same sampling locations and widely accepted demographic methodology, our analysis indicates a minimum all-life stages population size of >2000 individuals in the California subpopulation is required to account for the number and size range of individual sharks observed at the two sampled sites. Even accounting for methodological and conceptual biases, an extrapolation of these data to estimate the white shark population size throughout the ENP is inappropriate. The true ENP white shark population size is likely several-fold greater as both our study and the original published estimate exclude non-aggregating sharks and those that independently aggregate at other important ENP sites. Accurately estimating the central California and ENP white shark population size requires methodologies that account for biases introduced by sampling a limited number of sites and that account for all life history stages across the species' range of habitats.
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- 2014
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12. Comparative demography of skates: life-history correlates of productivity and implications for management.
- Author
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Barnett LA, Winton MV, Ainsley SM, Cailliet GM, and Ebert DA
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Animals, Computer Simulation, Environment, Female, Longevity, Monte Carlo Method, Population Dynamics, Sexual Maturation, Models, Statistical, Skates, Fish growth & development
- Abstract
Age-structured demographic models were constructed based on empirical estimates of longevity and maturity for five deepwater Bering Sea skates to investigate how observed differences in life history parameters affect population growth rates. Monte Carlo simulations were used to incorporate parameter uncertainty. Estimated population growth rates ranged from 1.045 to 1.129 yr(-1) and were lower than those reported for other Alaskan skates and most chondrichthyans. Population growth rates of these and other high-latitude skates increased with relative reproductive lifespan, but displayed no significant relationship with body size or depth distribution, suggesting that assemblage shifts may be difficult to predict for data-poor taxa. Elasticity analyses indicated that juvenile and adult survival had greater per-unit effects on population growth rates than did egg-case survival or fecundity. Population growth rate was affected more by uncertainty in age at maturity than maximum age. The results of this study indicate that if skates are deemed to be a management concern, gear modifications or depth-specific effort controls may be effective.
- Published
- 2013
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13. Stable-isotope analysis of a deep-sea benthic-fish assemblage: evidence of an enriched benthic food web.
- Author
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Boyle MD, Ebert DA, and Cailliet GM
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- Animals, Biota, Carbon Isotopes analysis, Diet, Ecosystem, Gastrointestinal Contents, Linear Models, Models, Biological, Nitrogen Isotopes analysis, Pacific Ocean, Fishes physiology, Food Chain, Invertebrates physiology, Skates, Fish physiology
- Abstract
In this study, fishes and invertebrates collected from the continental slope (1000 m) of the eastern North Pacific Ocean were analysed using stable-isotope analysis (SIA). Resulting trophic positions (T(P) ) were compared to known diets and habitats from the literature. Dual isotope plots indicated that most species groups (invertebrates and fishes) sorted as expected along the carbon and nitrogen axes, with less intraspecific variability than interspecific variability. Results also indicated an isotopically distinct benthic and pelagic food web, as the benthic food web was more enriched in both nitrogen and carbon isotopes. Trophic positions from SIA supported this finding, resulting in the assignment of fishes to different trophic positions from those expected based on published dietary information. These differences can be explained largely by the habitat of the prey and the percentage of the diet that was scavenged. A mixing model estimated dietary contributions of prey similar to those of the known diet of Bathyraja trachura from stomach-content analysis (SCA). Linear regressions indicated that trophic positions calculated from SIA and SCA, when plotted against B. trachura total length for 32 individuals, exhibited similar variation and patterns. Only the T(P) from SCA yielded significant results (stomach content: P < 0·05, stable isotope: P > 0·05)., (© 2012 The Authors. Journal of Fish Biology © 2012 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles.)
- Published
- 2012
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14. Evidence of stability in a chondrichthyan population: case study of the spotted ratfish Hydrolagus colliei (Chondrichthyes: Chimaeridae).
- Author
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Barnett LA, Ebert DA, and Cailliet GM
- Subjects
- Animals, Atlantic Ocean, Fisheries statistics & numerical data, Linear Models, Population Density, Population Dynamics, United States, Conservation of Natural Resources, Fishes
- Abstract
Results presented here provide evidence of an exception to the generalization that all chondrichthyan populations are especially vulnerable to exploitation to the extent that they remain at low abundance for a protracted or indefinite duration even after exploitation rates are reduced. Delta log-normal generalized linear models (GLM) and cluster analysis of fishery-independent catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) data from 1977 to 2006 indicated the presence of at least two distinct stocks of spotted ratfish Hydrolagus colliei off the U.S. West Coast. CPUE of the continental slope and northern continental shelf and upper slope populations did not vary between 1977 and 1995 and increased from 1995 to 2006. On the basis of the timing of these changes, it is likely that both fishing and climate influenced these trends. Sex and size-specific differences in bathymetric distribution, along with the identification of nursery sites, indicate that fishery by-catch could have a significant effect on population growth. These aggregative behaviours, combined with low fecundity, indicate that H. colliei may be vulnerable to irreversible population depletion by fisheries mortality. Temporal abundance trends indicated, however, that their population size has increased significantly within the last decade, a demonstration of population stability. A literature review indicated that there is also evidence for population stability in other chondrichthyans. The paradigm that all chondrichthyan populations fail to rebuild in response to exploitation, therefore, may not be as broadly applicable as previously thought. Thus, it is not necessarily sufficient to make generalizations regarding the vulnerability of chondrichthyans across higher taxonomic scales., (© 2012 The Authors. Journal of Fish Biology © 2012 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles.)
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- 2012
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15. Assessment of the dorsal fin spine for chimaeroid (Holocephali: Chimaeriformes) age estimation.
- Author
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Barnett LA, Ebert DA, and Cailliet GM
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- Animals, Electronic Data Processing methods, Linear Models, Age Determination by Skeleton veterinary, Animal Fins anatomy & histology, Fisheries methods, Fishes anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Previous attempts to age chimaeroids have not rigorously tested assumptions of dorsal fin spine growth dynamics. Here, novel imaging and data-analysis techniques revealed that the dorsal fin spine of the spotted ratfish Hydrolagus colliei is an unreliable structure for age estimation. Variation among individuals in the relationship between spine width and distance from the spine tip indicated that the technique of transverse sectioning may impart imprecision and bias to age estimates. The number of growth-band pairs observed by light microscopy in the inner dentine layer was not a good predictor of body size. Mineral density gradients, indicative of growth zones, were absent in the dorsal fin spine of H. colliei, decreasing the likelihood that the bands observed by light microscopy represent a record of growth with consistent periodicity. These results indicate that the hypothesis of aseasonal growth remains plausible and it should not be assumed that chimaeroid age is quantifiable by standard techniques.
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- 2009
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16. Egg cases of the genus Apristurus (Chondrichthyes: Scyliorhinidae): phylogenetic and ecological implications.
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Flammang BE, Ebert DA, and Cailliet GM
- Subjects
- Animals, Egg Shell anatomy & histology, Female, Reproduction physiology, Egg Shell ultrastructure, Oviposition physiology, Phylogeny, Sharks classification, Sharks embryology
- Abstract
The genus Apristurus has been divided formerly into three species subgroups based on morphological and molecular phylogenies. Previous studies have agreed on the separation into distinct species groups, the largest two of which have been described as the brunneus and spongiceps groups. An examination of the egg cases produced by these oviparous catsharks corroborates the distinction in species groups: egg cases of the brunneus group have long fibrous and curly tendrils at either end, whereas egg cases of the spongiceps group lack tendrils. The egg cases of A. kampae, A. manis, A. spongiceps and Apristurus sp. D are described for the first time, and the egg cases of A. brunneus and A. riveri are re-described to include comparable morphological characteristics. The ecological implications of egg case morphology on oviposition and ventilation are also discussed.
- Published
- 2007
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17. Calcitonin-like immunoreactivity in serum and tissues of the bonnethead shark, Sphyrna tiburo.
- Author
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Nichols S, Gelsleichter J, Manire CA, and Cailliet GM
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- Animals, Embryo, Nonmammalian metabolism, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Female, Immunohistochemistry, Ovarian Follicle metabolism, Pregnancy, Reference Values, Reproduction physiology, Seasons, Calcitonin metabolism, Pregnancy, Animal metabolism, Sharks embryology, Sharks metabolism
- Abstract
Calcitonin is a 32-amino acid peptide hormone that is best known for its actions in maintaining skeletal integrity and calcium homeostasis in mammals. Calcitonin also appears to function in regulating certain aspects of animal reproduction, but the nature of this role remains unclear, particularly in nonmammalian vertebrates. The present study investigated the relationship between calcitonin and reproduction in the bonnethead shark (Sphyrna tiburo), a well-studied member of the oldest living vertebrate group (i.e. elasmobranchs) known to possess a calcitonin-producing organ. Serum calcitonin concentrations were measured in 28 reproductively mature female S. tiburo using a heterologous enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) system. Sites of calcitonin immunoreactivity were detected in tissues of mature female and embryonic S. tiburo using immunocytochemistry. Significant increases in serum calcitonin concentrations of mature female S. tiburo occurred during early stages of gestation, a period characterized by yolk-dependency of developing embryos. Immunoreactive calcitonin was detected in the duodenum and pancreas of embryonic S. tiburo sampled during the same period. The results from this study suggest that calcitonin obtained from endogenous and/or maternal sources may function in regulating yolk digestion in embryonic S. tiburo. Therefore, the association between calcitonin and reproduction in elasmobranchs may reflect an important role for this hormone in embryonic development., (Copyright 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2003
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18. Age determination and validation studies of marine fishes: do deep-dwellers live longer?
- Author
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Cailliet GM, Andrews AH, Burton EJ, Watters DL, Kline DE, and Ferry-Graham LA
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Animals, Fishes physiology, Radiometry, Ecosystem, Fishes growth & development, Longevity physiology
- Abstract
Age determination and validation studies on deep-water marine fishes indicate they are difficult to age and often long-lived. Techniques for the determination of age in individual fish includes growth-zone analysis of vertebral centra, fin rays and spines, other skeletal structures, and otoliths (there are three sets of otoliths in most bony fish semicircular canals, each of which is made of calcium carbonate). Most have regular increments deposited as the fish (and its semicircular canals) grows. The most commonly used otolith for age determination is the largest one called the sagitta. Age validation techniques include: (1) tag-recapture, often combined with oxytetracycline injection and analysis in growth-zones of bone upon recapture; (2) analysis of growth-zones over time; and (3) radiometric approaches utilizing a known radioactive decay series as an independent chronometer in otoliths from bony fishes. We briefly summarize previous studies using these three validation approaches and present results from several of our radiometric studies on deep-water, bony fishes recently subjected to expanding fisheries. Radiometric age validation results are presented for four species of scorpaenid fishes (the bank, Sebastes rufus, and bocaccio, S. paucispinis, rockfishes, and two thornyhead species, Sebastolobus altivelis and S. alascanus). In addition, our analysis of scorpaenids indicates that longevity increases exponentially with maximum depth of occurrence. The reason that the deep-water forms of scorpaenid fishes are long-lived is uncertain. Their longevity, however, may be related to altered physiological processes relative to environmental parameters like low temperature, high pressures, low light levels, low oxygen, and poor food resources.
- Published
- 2001
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19. The deep-sea as a final global sink of semivolatile persistent organic pollutants? Part II: Organochlorine pesticides in surface and deep-sea dwelling fish of the north and south Atlantic and the Monterey Bay Canyon (California).
- Author
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Looser R, Froescheis O, Cailliet GM, Jarman WM, and Ballschmiter K
- Subjects
- Animals, Atlantic Ocean, California, DDT analysis, Ecosystem, Environmental Monitoring, Fishes, Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated analysis, Pesticides analysis, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis
- Abstract
The understanding of the global environmental multiphase distribution of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) as a result of the physico-chemical properties of the respective compounds is well established. We have analysed the results of a vertical transport of POPs from surface water to deepwater in terms of the contamination of the biota living in the respective environmental compartments. Samples were taken from the North and the South Atlantic and from the uprising water region of the continental shelf of California (Marine Sanctuary Monterey Bay and its Canyon). The contents of persistent organochlorine pesticides (DDTs, chlordanes, toxaphenes, HCHs, and HCB) in surface-living fish are compared to those in deepwater fish of the same geographic area. The deepwater biota show significantly higher burdens as compared to surface-living species of the same region. There are also indications for recycling processes of POPs of the class of organochlorine pesticides in the biophase of the abyss as well. It can be concluded that the bio- and geophase of the deep-sea may act as an ultimate global sink for persistent semivolatile contaminants in the marine environment like the soil on the continents.
- Published
- 2000
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20. The deep-sea as a final global sink of semivolatile persistent organic pollutants? Part I: PCBs in surface and deep-sea dwelling fish of the north and south Atlantic and the Monterey Bay Canyon (California).
- Author
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Froescheis O, Looser R, Cailliet GM, Jarman WM, and Ballschmiter K
- Subjects
- Animals, Atlantic Ocean, California, Ecosystem, Environmental Monitoring methods, Fishes, Polychlorinated Biphenyls analysis, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis
- Abstract
The understanding of the global environmental multiphase distribution of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) as a result of the physico-chemical properties of the respective compounds is well established. We have analysed the results of a vertical transport of POPs from upper water layers (0-200 m) to the deepwater region (> 800 m) in terms of the contamination of the biophase in both water layers. The contents of persistent organochlorine compounds like polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in fish living in the upper water layers of the North Atlantic and the South Atlantic, and at the continental shelf of California (Marine Sanctuary Monterey Bay and its deep-sea Canyon) are compared to the levels in deep-sea or bottom dwelling fish within the same geographic area. The deep-sea biota show significantly higher burdens as compared to surface-living species of the same region. There are also indications for recycling processes of POPs--in this case the PCBs--in the biophase of the abyss as well. It can be concluded that the bio- and geo phase of the deep-sea may act similarly as the upper horizons of forest and grasslands on the continents as an ultimate global sink for POPs in the marine environment.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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