Otolith δ18O and microstructure analyses provide further evidence of population structure in sardine Sardinops sagax around South Africa

Author:

Sakamoto Tatsuya1ORCID,van der Lingen Carl D23,Shirai Kotaro4ORCID,Ishimura Toyoho5,Geja Yonela2,Peterson James2,Komatsu Kosei46

Affiliation:

1. Seikai National Fisheries Research Institute, Fisheries Research and Education Agency, Nagasaki, Japan

2. Branch: Fisheries Management, Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, Cape Town, South Africa

3. Department of Biological Sciences, Marine Biology Research Institute, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa

4. Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo, Chiba, Japan

5. National Institute of Technology, Ibaraki College, Ibaraki, Japan

6. Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, University of Tokyo, Chiba, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Sardine Sardinops sagax is an ecologically and economically important Clupeid found off the entire South African coast that includes both coastal upwelling and western boundary current systems. Although the management of the sardine fisheries historically assumed a single, panmictic population, the existence of three, semi-discrete subpopulations has recently been hypothesized. We conducted otolith δ18O and microstructure analyses to investigate nursery habitat temperatures and early life growth rates, respectively, of sardine collected from three biogeographic regions around South Africa’s coast to test that hypothesis. Analyses indicated that for both summer- and winter-captured adults and summer-captured juveniles, fishes from the west coast grew significantly slower in water that was several degrees cooler than those from the south and east coasts. This suggests that mixing of sardines between regions, particularly the west and other coasts, is relatively limited and supports the hypothesis of semi-discrete subpopulations. However, the west-south differences disappeared in the results for winter-captured juveniles, suggesting that differences in early life conditions between regions may change seasonally, and/or that all or most winter-captured juveniles originated from the west coast. Further elucidating the interactions between South African sardine subpopulations and the mechanisms thereof is important for sustainable harvesting of this species.

Funder

KAKENHI

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

JSPS

International Exchange Program for Graduate Students

Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences

The University of Tokyo

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

Reference61 articles.

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