Comprehensive late June surveys have for decades been carried out on the Faroe shelf in order to estimate the abundance of juvenile fish-the 0-group. The abundance of cod juveniles has previously been used in recruitment studies, while the ecological implication of the 0-groups has hitherto received less attention. Here we examined the pelagic 0-group stage in four of the main fish species on the Faroe shelf: cod, haddock, Norway pout and sandeel, representing more than 90% of all juvenile fish on the shelf. A positive relationship between length and abundance at the 0-group stage is observed for all juveniles, and the inter-annual variability was highly similar among the four fish species. Based on this knowledge, we produced a new ecological indicator for the central Faroe shelf ecosystem-the 0-group length index. The 0-group length index is characterized by marked peaks
The availability of suitable prey during the early life of fish may determine recruitment to the adult population. Since larval and juvenile feeding can be highly selective, their preferences for certain prey species and sizes should be considered when estimating the availability of prey. In this study, diet composition (and prey preferences) of 4984 (1366) Faroe Plateau cod (Gadus morhua) larvae and juveniles between 3 and 63 mm sampled on the central Faroe shelf (62°N, 6.8°W) over an 8-year period was investigated. Cod preyed on successively larger food items as they grew. Yolk-sac larvae consumed phytoplankton, copepod eggs and nauplii before the yolk sac was exhausted. Copepod eggs followed by calanoid nauplii were the predominant and preferred food items in the early larval stage. In the late larval stage these were replaced by small to medium sized (0.6-1.2 mm) copepod species mainly Pseudocalanus sp., Acartia sp. and early stage Calanus finmarchicus, of which the two former species appeared most preferred. Temora longicornis was highly abundant in juvenile cod, but the preference for this species was neutral. Positive selection and high abundance of late stage (≥ 1.5 mm) C. finmarchicus was observed in early juveniles, but C. finmarchicus was replaced by decapod larvae in late juveniles. Other abundant prey species such as Oithona sp. and barnacle larvae occurred in varying numbers in the guts, but were generally not positively selected at any stage. Late larval and early juvenile cod appeared to suffer from unfavourable feeding conditions as they fed on smaller prey than what they prefer potentially indicating bottle necks in the feeding at these development stages.
Calanus finmarchicus is a key secondary producer in the North Atlantic. Shortly prior to the spring bloom the animals ascend from diapause at depth to surface waters, where the females spawn partly, based on winter lipid reserves. C. finmarchicus eggs are an important prey of first feeding fish larvae inhabiting North Atlantic shelves during early spring and are thus essential for larval survival. Comprehensive late April surveys have been carried out on and around the Faroe shelf, which is located between the Northeast Atlantic and the Nordic Seas, for more than two decades. One aim is to investigate the critical match-mismatch between the spring bloom development, zooplankton reproduction and occurrence of first feeding fish larvae. In this study, we examine spatial and temporal changes in pre-bloom reproductive activity of C. finmarchicus on and around the shelf using a unique dataset of more than 8,000 examined females sampled during the period 1997–2020. Enhanced productivity was observed on the north-western side of the shelf, where the main flow of oceanic water to the inner permanently well mixed shelf takes place. We attribute this increased productivity to enhanced food (phytoplankton) availability in the seasonally stratified outer shelf, slightly upstream of the main egg production area. Both individual egg production rates and the fraction of spawning females declined throughout the Faroe shelf during the examined period. This decline could not be explained by the employed environmental parameters. The declining pre-bloom egg production may have consequences for first feeding fish larvae.
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