Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/119642
Title: Stranding of Mesopelagic Fishes in the Canary Islands
Authors: Sarmiento Lezcano, Airam Nauzet 
Couret Huertas, María 
Lombarte, Antoni
Olivar, María Pilar
Landeira Sánchez, José María 
Hernández León, Santiago Manuel 
Tuset Andujar,Victor Manuel 
UNESCO Clasification: 240114-4 Taxonomía animal. Peces
251007 Oceanografía física
251006 Procesos del fondo marino
250814 Aguas superficiales
Keywords: Myctophids
Central-eastern Atlantic
Otoliths
Remote sensing
Issue Date: 2022
Project: Sustainable management of mesopelagic resources 
Tropical and South Atlantic - climate-based marine ecosystem prediction for sustainable management 
Desenmarañando la Estacionalidad Del Flujo Activo de Carbono en El Océano 
Journal: Animals 
Abstract: Most mesopelagic fishes perform large diel vertical migrations from the deep-sea zone to the surface. Although there is a trade-off between a higher food availability at the upper layers and an energy cost and predation risk, incursion towards the surface also implies a transport by currents, where the fish are exposed to a stranding risk on the coast. Here, we reported the first documented stranding of mesopelagic fishes along the southeast shore of Gran Canaria Island. Our study hypothesized that (1) the influence of the Canary Current, (2) the dominant incidence of the Trade Winds during summer, and (3) the presence of an upwelling filament coupled with an anticyclonic eddy south of Gran Canaria Island were the causative mechanisms of the strandings. Diaphus dumerilii (Myctophidae family) was the main species found as observed from an external morphological analysis using traditional taxonomy. The otolith contour analysis suggested the presence of other Diaphus spp. and Lobianchia dofleini. Nevertheless, the otolith morphological features described in the literature suggested that all the specimens were actually D. dumerelii. Errors in the identification were mainly due to the high intraspecific variability found in the otolith morphology. Even so, two patterns of oval and elliptic shapes were described with significant differences in its morphometry
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/119642
ISSN: 2076-2615
DOI: 10.3390/ani12243465
Source: Animals [ISSN 2076-2615], v. 12, 3465
Appears in Collections:Artículos
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