Fluctuations in year-class size of striped bass (Morone saxatilis) are believed related to early-lifestage mortality. Factors associated with food and feeding of larvae were studied in the laboratory as they relate to mortality, point of no return, development, and energetics. Mortality of feeding larvae was directly related to density of Artemia salina nauplii. Highest mortality coincided with total oil globule absorption. Starved larvae lived an average 31 days after fertilization and did not display a well-defined point of no return. Growth and differentiation directly correlated with food density. Starvation affected the rate of ossification and altered cells and tissues as early as 7 days after hatching. Most of the endogenous energy of newly fertilized eggs is in oil. The rate of oil utilization was inversely related to food density. Daily food rations were estimated after ingestion and digestion rates were determined, and increased with larva size, age, and prey density.Between 1879 and 1882, 432 juvenile striped bass (Morone saxatilis) from the Navesink River, New Jersey, were released into the San Francisco Bay-Delta estuary. The transplant was so successful that, within 10 years, the commercial fishery landed 554 t (Skinner 1962). In less than 100 years, the Pacific range of striped bass has expanded south to 30 km below the United States-Mexico border and north to Barkley Sound, British Columbia (Miller and Lea 1972). Over the intervening years, sport and commercial catch records have indicated considerable fluctuations in the Pacific striped bass population (Smith and Kato 1979), and present estimates place the population at 33 to 40% of its peak 1960 estimate of 3.0 to 4.5 x 10 • fish. Recent field data indicate that mortality during the first 60 days after hatching determines the size of the adult population. Further, abundance of young-of-the-year juveniles is directly related to river outflows and diversion volumes in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta (Chadwick et al. 1977). However, aside from direct export of eggs and larvae out of the estuary via water diversions, the actual causes of mortality remain undetermined. As part of a cooperative research program involving the
ABSTRAClThe unique physiological flexibility of the early life stages of striped bass is attributed to the calorierich endogenous energy sources of the striped bass egg. Eggs of different aged striped bass from geographically separate populations were examined tor lipid and fatty acid compositions and were found to be basically similar. Yolk components of the eggs contained significantly less total lipid than oil globules, were more diverse in lipid class composition and consisted mostly of polar lipids. Oil globules were entirely lipid material consisting predominantly of steryl/ wax esters. Fatty acid compositions of yolk and oil globules differed according to their respective lipid compositions. The functional significance of these lipids is discussed in relation to the ecological context of the early life stages.
The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) is charged with restoring and protecting anadromous Pacific salmon stocks in all habitats of U.S. waters, including their period of residence in estuarine and oceanic waters. Recent studies have implicated the estuarine and coastal phase of the salmon life cycle as being of equal importance to the freshwater phase in determining production. Evaluation of the freshwater phase of salmon has yielded a better understanding of the factors limiting production in this environment; however, a comparable understanding in the marine environment is lacking. Currently, some marine salmon research is being conducted at various NMFS labs on the West Coast, but there has been little attempt to coordinate activities among the different regions. In response, we propose a comprehensive plan to address ocean and estuarine survival of salmon by identifying research needs and suggesting ways to meet these needs. We recommend that NMFS research focus on (1) distribution and movement patterns of salmon in marine waters, (2) health and condition of hatchery and wild salmon, (3) trophic dynamics of salmon, and (4) large‐scale effects of the atmosphere and ocean.
SynopsisField and laboratory studies were conducted for 3 years on the yellowtail rockfish, Sebastes flavidus, from Cordell Bank, California, in order to characterize the reproduction of this species whose northern stocks have declined. Research findings included reversal of the sex ratios and male-female ages and sizes at age throughout the annual cycle, heavier and longer females at age than males after sexual maturation, maturation of females at 6 and males at 8 years, long reproductive lifespans, distinct male and female gonadosomatic index patterns over the annual cycle, age-and size-specific fecundity, no difference between potential and realized fecundity and the seasonal changes associated with gonadogenesis. The reproductive profile of the Cordell Bank yellowtail rockfish provided a base for comparison with northern populations that appeared to differ, especially in age and size.
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