Distribution, population characteristics and trophic ecology of a sulphophilic hydrothermal vent tonguefish (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae)

Fish are not abundant at hydrothermal vents due to the toxicity of venting fluids. Those that are present usually roam the periphery of the vent field or visit occasionally to feed on the abundance of life supported by chemosynthesis. In the past decade, dense aggregations of a newly described flatf...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tyler, Jennifer
Other Authors: Tunnicliffe, Verena
Language:English
en
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/1090
id ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-1090
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-10902015-01-29T16:50:35Z Distribution, population characteristics and trophic ecology of a sulphophilic hydrothermal vent tonguefish (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae) Tyler, Jennifer Tunnicliffe, Verena Dower, John Marine Biology Hydrothermal Vents Flatfish UVic Subject Index::Sciences and Engineering::Biology::Zoology Fish are not abundant at hydrothermal vents due to the toxicity of venting fluids. Those that are present usually roam the periphery of the vent field or visit occasionally to feed on the abundance of life supported by chemosynthesis. In the past decade, dense aggregations of a newly described flatfish, Symphurus n.sp, have been observed in association with hydrothermal vents in the western Pacific hydrothermal vent biogeographic province. In this thesis I provide evidence that Symphurus n.sp is a vent obligate and consider the ramifications that this association with hydrothermal vents may have for its distribution, population characteristics, behaviour and diet. Symphurus n.sp has a widespread but disjunct distribution throughout the western Pacific hydrothermal vent biogeographic province. Symphurus n.sp appears to be restricted to hydrothermally active, shallow, sulphur rich seamounts. Symphurus n.sp occurs on unconsolidated volcanoclastic ash and solid sulphur crusts and in close association with molten elemental sulphur. The obvious affinity that this species has for native sulphur is unusual and remains unexplained. Unlike most vent-associated fish, Symphurus n.sp occurs in close contact with point source venting and its distribution extends to the periphery of vent fields but not beyond. The density of flatfish on these seamounts surpasses density estimates of flatfish nursery grounds on the continental shelf. On Daikoku Seamount (Mariana Volcanic Arc), mean flatfish abundances were 100 and 66 individuals m-2 in 2005 and 2006 respectively. The prey items that support such high densities of flatfish vary over spatial scales. Differing prey, in turn, results in differing foraging modes. On Nikko Seamount (Mariana Volcanic Arc), Symphurus n.sp is a “sit and wait” predator that feeds exclusively on a vent endemic shrimp, Opaepele loihi. On other seamounts, Symphurus n.sp is an opportunistic forager that preys mostly on polychaetes and small crustaceans. By counting annuli on otoliths I constructed growth curves and determined that growth rates differ between seamounts. This difference in growth rates is likely due to differences in their diet and foraging strategies. Symphurus n.sp may be allocating more energy to growth when less energy is required to forage. Furthermore, size distributions also differ between populations, likely due to variability in growth rates as well as differences in strong recruitment years. 2008-08-27T20:21:27Z 2008-08-27T20:21:27Z 2008 2008-08-27T20:21:27Z Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/1090 English en Available to the World Wide Web
collection NDLTD
language English
en
sources NDLTD
topic Marine Biology
Hydrothermal Vents
Flatfish
UVic Subject Index::Sciences and Engineering::Biology::Zoology
spellingShingle Marine Biology
Hydrothermal Vents
Flatfish
UVic Subject Index::Sciences and Engineering::Biology::Zoology
Tyler, Jennifer
Distribution, population characteristics and trophic ecology of a sulphophilic hydrothermal vent tonguefish (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae)
description Fish are not abundant at hydrothermal vents due to the toxicity of venting fluids. Those that are present usually roam the periphery of the vent field or visit occasionally to feed on the abundance of life supported by chemosynthesis. In the past decade, dense aggregations of a newly described flatfish, Symphurus n.sp, have been observed in association with hydrothermal vents in the western Pacific hydrothermal vent biogeographic province. In this thesis I provide evidence that Symphurus n.sp is a vent obligate and consider the ramifications that this association with hydrothermal vents may have for its distribution, population characteristics, behaviour and diet. Symphurus n.sp has a widespread but disjunct distribution throughout the western Pacific hydrothermal vent biogeographic province. Symphurus n.sp appears to be restricted to hydrothermally active, shallow, sulphur rich seamounts. Symphurus n.sp occurs on unconsolidated volcanoclastic ash and solid sulphur crusts and in close association with molten elemental sulphur. The obvious affinity that this species has for native sulphur is unusual and remains unexplained. Unlike most vent-associated fish, Symphurus n.sp occurs in close contact with point source venting and its distribution extends to the periphery of vent fields but not beyond. The density of flatfish on these seamounts surpasses density estimates of flatfish nursery grounds on the continental shelf. On Daikoku Seamount (Mariana Volcanic Arc), mean flatfish abundances were 100 and 66 individuals m-2 in 2005 and 2006 respectively. The prey items that support such high densities of flatfish vary over spatial scales. Differing prey, in turn, results in differing foraging modes. On Nikko Seamount (Mariana Volcanic Arc), Symphurus n.sp is a “sit and wait” predator that feeds exclusively on a vent endemic shrimp, Opaepele loihi. On other seamounts, Symphurus n.sp is an opportunistic forager that preys mostly on polychaetes and small crustaceans. By counting annuli on otoliths I constructed growth curves and determined that growth rates differ between seamounts. This difference in growth rates is likely due to differences in their diet and foraging strategies. Symphurus n.sp may be allocating more energy to growth when less energy is required to forage. Furthermore, size distributions also differ between populations, likely due to variability in growth rates as well as differences in strong recruitment years.
author2 Tunnicliffe, Verena
author_facet Tunnicliffe, Verena
Tyler, Jennifer
author Tyler, Jennifer
author_sort Tyler, Jennifer
title Distribution, population characteristics and trophic ecology of a sulphophilic hydrothermal vent tonguefish (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae)
title_short Distribution, population characteristics and trophic ecology of a sulphophilic hydrothermal vent tonguefish (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae)
title_full Distribution, population characteristics and trophic ecology of a sulphophilic hydrothermal vent tonguefish (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae)
title_fullStr Distribution, population characteristics and trophic ecology of a sulphophilic hydrothermal vent tonguefish (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae)
title_full_unstemmed Distribution, population characteristics and trophic ecology of a sulphophilic hydrothermal vent tonguefish (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae)
title_sort distribution, population characteristics and trophic ecology of a sulphophilic hydrothermal vent tonguefish (pleuronectiformes: cynoglossidae)
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/1090
work_keys_str_mv AT tylerjennifer distributionpopulationcharacteristicsandtrophicecologyofasulphophilichydrothermalventtonguefishpleuronectiformescynoglossidae
_version_ 1716728830344822784