4 results match your criteria: "IRAGO Institute Co.[Affiliation]"
Sci Rep
January 2025
Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo, Kashiwa, 277-8564, Chiba, Japan.
Migration routes and the depth patterns of anguillid eel larvae migrating long distances from spawning grounds in the ocean remain poorly understood. We used otolith stable isotope analysis to study the oceanic migrations of anguillid eels by reconstructing experienced water temperature histories of larvae. The otolith stable oxygen isotopes (δO) of recruited Anguilla japonica glass eels were analyzed to assess the relationship with the experienced water temperature of the early larval stage in laboratory experiments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDis Aquat Organ
November 2023
IRAGO Institute Co., Ltd., Tahara, Aichi 441-3605, Japan.
Even though reared leptocephalus larvae of the Japanese eel Anguilla japonica have a high incidence of notochord deformities (>60%), the cause is unknown. We performed histological examinations of the notochord and associated organs in reared larvae to better understand the process causing notochord deformation in eel larvae. In deformed larvae, unknown tissue thickening was discovered near the notochord sheath.
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March 2020
Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo, 1-1-1 Yayoi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, 113-8657, Japan.
To understand the spawning ecology of the Japanese eel, the spawning time of this species was estimated based on measurements of the ascending speed of eggs and previously obtained data. Two types of water temperature parameters were calculated assuming an arbitrary spawning time. The 'incubation temperature' of 53 eggs collected in the spawning area was estimated based on the developmental stage of each egg and experimentally determined relationships between water temperature and incubation duration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZool Stud
June 2018
Department of Marine Science and Resource, Nihon University, 1866 Kameino, Fujisawa, Kanagawa 252-0880, Japan. E-mail:
Japanese eels were tagged in order to understand their behavior in their spawning area. Three silver eels (EEL-A, B, C: TL792, 898, 992 mm) were tagged with pop-up satellite archival transmitting tags (PSATs) and released at different locations near/in their spawning area along the southern part of the West Mariana Ridge. EEL-A showed premature tag pop-up with mostly disordered records and the EEL-C tag did not pop up, while EEL-B showed stable diel vertical migrations during 31 of the 43 days it was tracked.
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