Distribution and Lipid Composition of Pandalus Shrimp Larvae in Relation to

The abundance and distribution of shrimp larvae were studied along four transects off West Greenland in June–July 1996. Zooplankton samples and vertical profiles of tem-perature, salinity, and fluorescence were obtained along the transects in order to relate larval distribution to hydrographical and...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hydrography West, Greenland Waters, Søren Anker Pedersen
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.512.9685
http://journal.nafo.int/J24/pedersen.pdf
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Summary:The abundance and distribution of shrimp larvae were studied along four transects off West Greenland in June–July 1996. Zooplankton samples and vertical profiles of tem-perature, salinity, and fluorescence were obtained along the transects in order to relate larval distribution to hydrographical and biological characteristics. Eight species of shrimp larvae occurred in the samples; Pandalus montagui and Pandalus borealis were the most numerous constituting 61 and 29 % of the larvae, respectively. Other species of shrimp larvae were, in declining order of abundance, Sabinea septemcarinata, Lebbeus groenlandicus, Spirontocaris spinus, Eualus galmardi, Pontophilus (norvegicus?), and Argis dentata. Pandalus shrimp larval density showed a significant positive association with mean fluorescence (5–80 m), but no association with mean temperature, or densities of copepod eggs and nauplii. However, most larvae were caught in water columns with tem-peratures and salinities of ~2 ° C. and ~33 psu, respectively. Abundance of P. montagui was negatively correlated with mean salinity and the proportion of P. montagui was higher in stations closest to the coast. Catches of P. montagui and P. borealis larvae were posi-