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  • Area/locality; Basin Scale Analysis, Synthesis and Integration; Calanus finmarchicus, egg production rate, standard deviation; Calanus finmarchicus, egg production rate, standard error; Calanus finmarchicus, egg production rate per female; Calanus finmarchicus, eggs per clutch; Calanus finmarchicus, eggs per clutch, standard deviation; Calanus finmarchicus, eggs per clutch, standard error; Calanus finmarchicus, female, prosome length; Calanus finmarchicus, female, prosome length, standard deviation; Calanus finmarchicus, female, prosome length, standard error; Calanus finmarchicus, spawning frequency; Calanus finmarchicus, spawning frequency, standard deviation; Calanus finmarchicus, spawning frequency, standard error; Chlorophyll a, areal concentration; Chlorophyll a, standard deviation; Chlorophyll a, standard error; Depth, bottom/max; Depth, top/min; EURO-BASIN; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Number of measurements; Sampling date; Season; Temperature, water; Temperature, water, standard deviation; Temperature, water, standard error  (1)
  • Feeding migration  (1)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2020. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Melle, W., Klevjer, T., Strand, E., Wiebe, P. H., Slotte, A., & Huse, G. Fine-scale observations of physical and biological environment along a herring feeding migration route. Deep-Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 180, (2020): 104845, doi:10.1016/j.dsr2.2020.104845.
    Description: We observed herring horizontal and vertical distribution during feeding migration along a 128 km transect across the Arctic front of the Norwegian and Iceland seas, in early June, in relation to its physical, chemical and biological environment, distribution of prey organisms and pelagic and mesopelagic competitors. The Norwegian Spring Spawning herring is one of the largest and economically most important stocks of pelagic fish in the world and understanding what controls its feeding migration is, and has been for centuries, a major research question that also has major implications for management. High resolution ecosystem data were obtained by hull mounted multi-frequency acoustics and a towed platform undulating between 10 and 400 m equipped with multi-frequency acoustics, temperature, salinity and fluorescence sensors, an Optical Plankton Counter and a Video Plankton Recorder. Additional sampling was done by MOCNESS, Macroplankton trawl, and CTD equipped with water bottles for temperature, salinity, nutrients and chlorophyll at discrete stations along the transect. Biological characteristics and stomach content of the herring were obtained from samples at discrete trawl stations. The Arctic front proved to be an important transitional zone in zooplankton biomass, abundance and diversity. Phenology of phyto- and zooplankton also changed across the front, being somewhat delayed on the cold side. The herring were distributed all along the transect showing a shallow distribution on the warm side and both deep and shallow on the cold side, not clearly related to light and time of the day. The herring stomach content was higher on the cold side. There was no significant pattern in average age, weight, or body length of the herring along the transect. The herring were present and fed in the area of the transect during the time when the overwintering generation of Calanus finmarchicus dominated, before the development of the new generation of the year. We suggest that the phenology of C. finmarchicus can be an important driver of the herring feeding migration. While prey-availability was higher on the Arctic side of the front, light conditions for visual feeding at depth were probably better on the Atlantic side. The herring did not show classical dial vertical migration, but its prey did, and the herring's prey were probably available within the upper 100 m during the course of a 24 h cycle. With a general westward direction of migration, the herring along the transect moved towards lower temperatures and temperature did not seem to be a probable driver for migration. We conclude that fine-scale studies of herring migration and feeding can increase our understanding of the migratory processes and add to our understanding of large-scale distributional patterns, changes therein, and herring trophodynamics and ecological role. The fine-resolution parameters can also be important as input to ecosystem models.
    Description: We would also like to acknowledge the funding from Euro-BASIN, EU FP7, Grant agreement No 264933, HARMES, Research Council of Norway project number 280546 and MEESO, EU H2020 research and innovation programme, Grant Agreement No 817669.
    Keywords: Herring ; Feeding migration ; Environment ; Prey distribution ; Fine-scale observation
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Melle, Webjørn; Runge, Jeffrey A; Head, Erica J H; Plourde, Stéphane; Castellani, Claudia; Licandro, Priscilla; Pierson, James; Jónasdóttir, Sigrún Huld; Johnson, C; Broms, Cecilie; Debes, Høgni; Falkenhaug, Tone; Gaard, Eilif; Gislason, Astthor; Heath, Michael R; Niehoff, Barbara; Nielsen, Torkel Gissel; Pepin, Pierre; Stenevik, Erling Kaare; Chust, Guillem (2015): Biogeography of key mesozooplankton species in the North Atlantic and egg production of Calanus finmarchicus. Earth System Science Data, 7(2), 223-230, https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-7-223-2015
    Publication Date: 2024-03-23
    Description: Observations of egg production rates (EPR) for female Calanus finmarchicus were compared from different regions of the North Atlantic. The regions were diverse in size and sampling frequency, ranging from a fixed time series station in the Lower St Lawrence Estuary, off Rimouski, where nearly 200 experiments were carried out between May and December from 1994 to 2006, to a large-scale survey in the Northern Norwegian Sea, where about 50 experiments were carried out between April and June from 2002 to 2004. For this analysis the stations were grouped mostly along geographic lines, with only limited attention being paid to oceanographic features. There is some overlap between regions, however, where stations were sometimes kept together when they were sampled on the same cruise. As well some stations other than off Rimouski were occupied more than once during different years and/or in different seasons.
    Keywords: Area/locality; Basin Scale Analysis, Synthesis and Integration; Calanus finmarchicus, egg production rate, standard deviation; Calanus finmarchicus, egg production rate, standard error; Calanus finmarchicus, egg production rate per female; Calanus finmarchicus, eggs per clutch; Calanus finmarchicus, eggs per clutch, standard deviation; Calanus finmarchicus, eggs per clutch, standard error; Calanus finmarchicus, female, prosome length; Calanus finmarchicus, female, prosome length, standard deviation; Calanus finmarchicus, female, prosome length, standard error; Calanus finmarchicus, spawning frequency; Calanus finmarchicus, spawning frequency, standard deviation; Calanus finmarchicus, spawning frequency, standard error; Chlorophyll a, areal concentration; Chlorophyll a, standard deviation; Chlorophyll a, standard error; Depth, bottom/max; Depth, top/min; EURO-BASIN; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Number of measurements; Sampling date; Season; Temperature, water; Temperature, water, standard deviation; Temperature, water, standard error
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1098 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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