Stable isotopes in eye lenses reveal migration and mixing patterns of diamond squid in the western North Pacific and its marginal seas

Author:

Sakamoto Tatsuya1ORCID,Horii Sachiko1,Kodama Taketoshi2,Takahashi Kazutaka2,Tawa Atsushi3,Tanaka Yosuke3,Ohshmio Seiji1

Affiliation:

1. Fisheries Resources Institute, Nagasaki Field Station, Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency , Nagasaki 851-2213 , Japan

2. Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo , Tokyo 113-0032 , Japan

3. Fisheries Resources Institute, Yokohama Field Station, Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency , Yokohama 236-8648 , Japan

Abstract

Abstract Knowledge of the movements of marine organisms is essential for effective conservation schemes. Here, we investigated the lifetime habitat use of diamond squid, Thysanoteuthis rhombus, collected in the western North Pacific and its marginal seas (the Sea of Japan and the East China Sea) during 2021–2022, whose migratory ecology is poorly known, using bulk stable nitrogen and carbon isotope ratios in eye lenses. From the eye lens isotope profiles, the chronology of the isotopic baseline of squid habitat was estimated by removing the effect of size-dependent changes of trophic position. Then, the baseline estimates were compared to the isoscapes of particulate organic matter. The baseline chronologies showed fluctuations during the paralarval and juvenile stages, becoming stable during the adult stage, suggesting that significant movements mainly occur during the early life stages due to current transport, with adults potentially not undertaking long-distance migrations. The squids in the marginal seas mostly originated from outside the subtropical gyre, while the squids in the subtropical gyre had various sources, including outside the gyre and southern and northern parts within the gyre, revealing a complex mixing pattern of the species. These results show that isotope chronology combined with baseline isoscapes are effective tools to understand animal migrations, which can help managing various cephalopods and fish.

Funder

Fisheries Agency of Japan

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

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