Effects of ration on the maturation and fecundity in captive Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus)
Journal article, Peer reviewed
View/ Open
Date
1998Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- Articles [3043]
Original version
http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f97-305Abstract
We examined the effects of amount of food on vitellogenic oocyte size and number (fecundity) between two
experimental groups of Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus) kept in separate but identical compartments of a large seawater
tank. Growth and maturation were monitored for 1.5 years. Each group of 200 fish was fed exclusively on krill. At the end of
the experiment, a high-ration group, fed 12 mg×g fish 1×day 1, had similar weights-at-length as wild specimens of the same
stock. A low-ration group fed about half the amount of the high-ration group had significantly lower weights-at-length. Ration
had no effect on oocyte size and relative potential fecundity (oocytes per gram), but mean potential fecundity (oocytes per
fish) of the low-ration fish was 26% lower than that of the high-ration fish. The relative intensity of early stages of atresia was
quantified histologically. Atresia is a common phenomenon in Atlantic herring and increases markedly with suboptimal
feeding. Mean relative atretic intensities were estimated at about 3 and 6% for the high- and low-ration groups, respectively,
but with large intragroup variation. Modeled realized fecundity (spawned eggs per fish) indicated a 9 and 40% reduction
compared with the measured potential fecundities, respectively.