The morphology of otoliths determines the function they perform, and it is influenced by genetic and environmental factors. Knowing those relationships is necessary to understand the role of hearing in fish. The objectives of this work were: exploring the shape of the sulcus of the sagittal otolith in seven species of Sciaenidae, in relation to sound production, and analyzing whether the shape and size of the sulcus can be used as a phylogenetic character.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMost mesopelagic fishes perform large diel vertical migrations from the deep-sea zone to the surface. Although there is a trade-off between a higher food availability at the upper layers and an energy cost and predation risk, incursion towards the surface also implies a transport by currents, where the fish are exposed to a stranding risk on the coast. Here, we reported the first documented stranding of mesopelagic fishes along the southeast shore of Gran Canaria Island.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe exploitation of forage fish species can modify the functioning of marine ecosystems potentially impacting the population status of predators. This may be the case for the western Mediterranean Sea, where a reduction in the biomass of two key pelagic forage fish (European anchovy Engraulis encrasicolus and European sardine Sardina pilchardus) could produce a change in the diet composition of their main predators, which would consume alternative preys or change the size of the prey consumed. Here, we aimed to investigate the potential effect of biomass reduction of sardine and anchovy in the western Mediterranean Sea on the trophic preferences of the little tunny (Euthynnus alletteratus), a medium-sized predator that present a high consumption of these forage fish.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGastropod shells may present large spines and sharp shapes that vary according to environmental, taxonomic, and evolutionary factors. In these cases, classic morphometric methods used to study shell contour might not provide a clear representation of morphological shell based on angular decomposition of contour. The present study analyzed and compared for the first time the robustness of the contour analysis using wavelet transformed and Elliptic Fourier descriptors for gastropod shells including enlarged spines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFisheries are one of the main economic sectors affected by marine litter, which can damage gear, reduce catch, and require time to repair or clean nets. This study aims to evaluate the type and density of marine litter in two shallow fishing grounds in the NW Mediterranean Sea, both belonging to the Natura 2000 network. Moreover, it quantifies the fraction of marine litter within the total catch to help understand the potential influence of marine litter on fisheries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContact inhibition enables noncancerous cells to cease proliferation and growth when they contact each other. This characteristic is lost when cells undergo malignant transformation, leading to uncontrolled proliferation and solid tumor formation. Here we report that autophagy is compromised in contact-inhibited cells in 2D or 3D-soft extracellular matrix cultures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study, we describe and analyse the morphology of the sagitta, the largest otolith, of 25 species of Gobiidae inhabiting the Adriatic and north-western Mediterranean seas. Our goal was to test the usefulness and efficiency of sagittal otoliths for species identification. Our analysis of otolith contours was based on mathematical descriptors called wavelets, which are related to multi-scale decompositions of contours.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRegressions between fish length and otolith size are provided for 40 species from the north-eastern Atlantic Ocean and 142 species from the Mediterranean Sea. Regressions were also estimated at genus level. Most of the regressions (c.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe sensory drive hypothesis proposes that environmental factors affect both signalling dynamics and the evolution of signals and receivers. Sound detection and equilibrium in marine fishes are senses dependent on the sagittae otoliths, whose morphological variability appears intrinsically linked to the environment. The aim of this study was to understand if and which environmental factors could be conditioning the evolution of this sensory structure, therefore lending support to the sensory drive hypothesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSagitta otolith shape was analysed in twenty sympatric rockfishes off the southern California coast (Northeastern Pacific). The variation in shape was quantified using canonical variate analysis based on fifth wavelet function decomposition of otolith contour. We selected wavelets because this representation allow the identifications of zones or single morphological points along the contour.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiological invasions have become major players in the current biodiversity crisis, but realistic tools to predict which species will establish successful populations are still unavailable. Here we present a novel approach that requires only a morphometric characterisation of the species. Using fish invasions of the Mediterranean, we show that the abundance of non-indigenous fishes correlates with the location and relative size of occupied morphological space within the receiving pool of species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is a considerable lack of information concerning marine invertebrate sensitivity to sound exposure. However, recent findings on cuttlefish and octopi showed that exposure to artificial noise had a direct consequence on the functionality and physiology of the statocysts, sensory organs, which are responsible for their equilibrium and movements in the water column. Owing to a lack of available data on deep diving cephalopod species, we conducted a noise exposure comparative experiment on one Mediterranean squid, Illex coindetii, and on the European squid Loligo vulgaris.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe otolith was used to investigate the variability between Aphanopus carbo and Aphanopus intermedius inhabiting the north-eastern Atlantic Ocean. The results indicate a high degree of morphological affinity between species and areas; a noticeable metabolic change in the otolith shape was noted in the specimens of A. carbo, which may be related to migrations of individuals from shallow water (closer to the continental coast) to deeper water (archipelagos of Madeira and the Canary Islands).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMathematical modeling suggests that relatively large values of otolith mass asymmetry in fishes can alter acoustic functionality and may be responsible for abnormal fish behavior when subjected to weightlessness during parabolic or space flight [D.V. Lychakov, Y.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Behav Evol
December 2000
The external taste buds of bony fishes are differentiated and grouped throughout the body epithelium, concentrating in the buccopharyngeal cavity or in certain external organs such as the lips, barbels or fins. The family Mullidae (goatfishes) is characterized by having barbels covered with taste buds (TBs). However, It is not known how the TBs are distributed and how their characteristics vary along the barbels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe morphology of the saccular otolith (sagitta) of five species of the genus Coelorinchus (grenadiers) from the southeastern Atlantic (C. coelorinchus, C. fasciatus, C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBony fishes add sensory hair cells to the saccule and lagena of the ear for at least several years after hatching. However, it is not known whether hair cell proliferation occurs for the whole lifetime of an animal, whether proliferation occurs in all endorgans of the ear, or whether the rate of proliferation is the same in all of the endorgans. To obtain answers to these questions, the extent of postembryonic hair-cell proliferation was determined in the saccule, lagena, and utricle of the ear in the European hake, Merluccius merluccius, for fish ranging from 7 to 75 cm in total length (6 months to 9 years of age).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensory hair cells in the striolar regions of the utricle and lagena of a teleost fish, the oscar (Astronotus ocellatus), were damaged following intramuscular injections of gentamicin sulfate. In order to determine whether fish can regenerate hair cells, the time course of damage and recovery was followed over a period of four weeks by scanning electron microscopy. Maximum loss of ciliary bundles occurred at about day 10 after the first of four daily injections of gentamicin (20 mg/kg) in 4-6 cm long fish.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe morphology of the sensory epithelia of the sacculus in two species of hake, Merluccius capensis and M. paradoxus, was analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The sensory epithelia have two morphological features that are very different from other gadiform species.
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