Swimming depth, ambient water temperature preference, and feeding frequency of young Pacific bluefin tuna (Thunnus orientalis) determined with archival tags

We investigated the migration and behavior of young Pacific Bluefin tuna (Thunnus orientalis) using archival tags. The archival tag measures environmental variables, recordsthem in its memory, and estimates daily geographical locations based on measured light levels. Of 166 archivaltags implanted in Pacific bluefin tuna that were released at the northeastern end of the East China Sea from 1995 to1997, 30 tags were recovered, including one from a fish that migrated across the Pacific. This article describes swimming depth, ambient water temperature, and feeding frequency of young Pacific bluefin tuna based on retrieved data. Tag performance, effect of the tag on the fish, and horizontal movements of the species are described in another paper. Young Pacific bluefin tuna swim mainly in the mixed layer, usually near the sea surface, and swim in deeper waterin daytime than at nighttime. They also exhibit a pattern of depth changes, corresponding to sunrise and sunset,apparently to avoid a specific low light level. The archival tags recorded temperature changes in viscera thatappear to be caused by feeding, and those changes indicate that young Pacific bluefin tuna commonly feed at dawn and in the daytime, but rarely at dusk or at night. Water temperature restricts their distribution, as indicatedby changes in their vertical distribution with the seasonal change in depth of the thermocline and by the fact that their horizontal distribution is in most cases confined to water in the temperature range of 14−20°C.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Itoh, Tomoyuki, Tsuji, Sachiko, Nitta, Akira
Format: article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2003
Subjects:Ecology, Fisheries, Management,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/30998
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Summary:We investigated the migration and behavior of young Pacific Bluefin tuna (Thunnus orientalis) using archival tags. The archival tag measures environmental variables, recordsthem in its memory, and estimates daily geographical locations based on measured light levels. Of 166 archivaltags implanted in Pacific bluefin tuna that were released at the northeastern end of the East China Sea from 1995 to1997, 30 tags were recovered, including one from a fish that migrated across the Pacific. This article describes swimming depth, ambient water temperature, and feeding frequency of young Pacific bluefin tuna based on retrieved data. Tag performance, effect of the tag on the fish, and horizontal movements of the species are described in another paper. Young Pacific bluefin tuna swim mainly in the mixed layer, usually near the sea surface, and swim in deeper waterin daytime than at nighttime. They also exhibit a pattern of depth changes, corresponding to sunrise and sunset,apparently to avoid a specific low light level. The archival tags recorded temperature changes in viscera thatappear to be caused by feeding, and those changes indicate that young Pacific bluefin tuna commonly feed at dawn and in the daytime, but rarely at dusk or at night. Water temperature restricts their distribution, as indicatedby changes in their vertical distribution with the seasonal change in depth of the thermocline and by the fact that their horizontal distribution is in most cases confined to water in the temperature range of 14−20°C.