I n short-run experiments herring larvae at the end of the yolk sac stage (SL 6.5 t o 8.5 m) were fed with maize and potato starch to investigate the effect of particle size on food selection. About 20% of the larvae ingested these particles during the experiments. I n the case of maize starch (3 t
Effect of temperature on the escape responses of larval herring,Clupea harengus
β Scribed by R. S. Batty; J. H. S. Blaxter; K. Fretwell
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 639 KB
- Volume
- 115
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0025-3162
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Herring (Clupea harengus L.) larvae from spring and autumn spawning stocks were reared at different constant temperatures from 5 ~ to 17 ~ At equivalent developmental stages, the spring larvae were longer than the autumn larvae and the larvae reared at low temperatures were longer than those reared at high temperatures. At hatching and at the end of the yolk-sac stage, the larvae were induced, by a probe, to make Cstart escape responses, which were recorded and analysed using a high-speed video recording at 400 frames s-1. The response was rapid and of short duration. The tailbeat frequency and swimming speed were measured during the burst of swimming following the C-start at different test temperatures and in larvae with different temperature histories. The tail-beat frequency was strongly temperature-dependent, rising from 19 Hz at 5 ~ to 37 Hz at 17 ~ with no effect of temperature history, season or developmental stage. The burst-swimming speed ranged at hatching from 75 to 90 mm s-a at 5 ~ to 110 to 160 mm s-1 at 17 ~ and at yolk resorption from 90-115rams -1 at 5~ to 175-190mms -~ at 17 ~ The longer, spring-spawned larvae swam faster than the shorter autumn-spawned larvae. When the swimming speeds were expressed as body lengths (L) s-t, these differences disappeared. Larvae swam from 7-9 Ls -~ at 5 ~ to 15-20 Ls -] at 17 ~ at hatching, and from 8-9 Ls -1 at 5 ~ to 15-17 Ls -1 at 17 ~ at yolk resorption. There was, however, a significantly faster specific swimming speed by the larvae reared at 12 ~ in spring 1991.
* Honorary Research Fellow of the Scottish Association for Marine Science ** Unfortunately, Karen Fretwell was drowned in an accident on
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