The effect of intertidal exposure on the survival and embryonic development of Pacific herring spawn

Eggs of Pacific herring were exposed to air for different periods of time in simulation of tidal effects on spawn deposits at varying beach heights. The maximum exposure range was 2/3 of a 24 hour day corresponding roughly to the exposure of eggs at 4 meters above mean low tide on the British Columb...

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Main Author: Jones, Barry Cyril
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33261
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-332612018-01-05T17:47:02Z The effect of intertidal exposure on the survival and embryonic development of Pacific herring spawn Jones, Barry Cyril Fishes -- Embryology. Pacific herring. Eggs of Pacific herring were exposed to air for different periods of time in simulation of tidal effects on spawn deposits at varying beach heights. The maximum exposure range was 2/3 of a 24 hour day corresponding roughly to the exposure of eggs at 4 meters above mean low tide on the British Columbia coast. Egg size, spawning fish length, and egg clump size were examined as secondary factors modifying the effect of exposure. Incubation time dropped from 19 to 18 days with only two 2-hour periods of exposure per day and thereafter fell slowly. It is suggested that oxygen deprivation triggered a hatching response for the initial drop, whereas the gradual decrease was due to a higher air temperature increasing metabolism. Hatching mortality rose steadily from an unexposed 13% to 31% at maximum exposure time, with significantly higher contributions from eggs of smaller fish and smaller egg clumps. Larval length at hatching for the unexposed eggs was 7.7 mm.; lengths for all degrees of exposure were similar (7% less than for no exposure). Larval weight (body plus yolk) remained relatively constant (0.099 mg.) until the longest exposure period when it dropped to 0.087 mg. This decrease coincided with similar sharp trends in incubation time and hatching mortality, and suggests a "critical point" near the upper experimental range of exposure, above which eggs stand little chance of normal development or survival. Beach surveys to note possible egg size stratification, although suggesting the deposition of larger eggs at the top levels, proved inconclusive, but point up the possibility that a heavy fishing pressure which reduces mean fish size might detrimentally affect potential stock recruitment via the intertidal exposure effect on the spawn. Science, Faculty of Zoology, Department of Graduate 2011-04-04T18:19:32Z 2011-04-04T18:19:32Z 1971 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33261 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Fishes -- Embryology.
Pacific herring.
spellingShingle Fishes -- Embryology.
Pacific herring.
Jones, Barry Cyril
The effect of intertidal exposure on the survival and embryonic development of Pacific herring spawn
description Eggs of Pacific herring were exposed to air for different periods of time in simulation of tidal effects on spawn deposits at varying beach heights. The maximum exposure range was 2/3 of a 24 hour day corresponding roughly to the exposure of eggs at 4 meters above mean low tide on the British Columbia coast. Egg size, spawning fish length, and egg clump size were examined as secondary factors modifying the effect of exposure. Incubation time dropped from 19 to 18 days with only two 2-hour periods of exposure per day and thereafter fell slowly. It is suggested that oxygen deprivation triggered a hatching response for the initial drop, whereas the gradual decrease was due to a higher air temperature increasing metabolism. Hatching mortality rose steadily from an unexposed 13% to 31% at maximum exposure time, with significantly higher contributions from eggs of smaller fish and smaller egg clumps. Larval length at hatching for the unexposed eggs was 7.7 mm.; lengths for all degrees of exposure were similar (7% less than for no exposure). Larval weight (body plus yolk) remained relatively constant (0.099 mg.) until the longest exposure period when it dropped to 0.087 mg. This decrease coincided with similar sharp trends in incubation time and hatching mortality, and suggests a "critical point" near the upper experimental range of exposure, above which eggs stand little chance of normal development or survival. Beach surveys to note possible egg size stratification, although suggesting the deposition of larger eggs at the top levels, proved inconclusive, but point up the possibility that a heavy fishing pressure which reduces mean fish size might detrimentally affect potential stock recruitment via the intertidal exposure effect on the spawn. === Science, Faculty of === Zoology, Department of === Graduate
author Jones, Barry Cyril
author_facet Jones, Barry Cyril
author_sort Jones, Barry Cyril
title The effect of intertidal exposure on the survival and embryonic development of Pacific herring spawn
title_short The effect of intertidal exposure on the survival and embryonic development of Pacific herring spawn
title_full The effect of intertidal exposure on the survival and embryonic development of Pacific herring spawn
title_fullStr The effect of intertidal exposure on the survival and embryonic development of Pacific herring spawn
title_full_unstemmed The effect of intertidal exposure on the survival and embryonic development of Pacific herring spawn
title_sort effect of intertidal exposure on the survival and embryonic development of pacific herring spawn
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33261
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