Can the Life History Trait Divergence of Two Extremes of a Cold-Water Genus Distribution Offer Evidence for Their Vulnerability to Sea Warming?

Cold- and deep-water species such as Molva species show low resilience to anthropogenic pressures, and they become particularly vulnerable at the warm edges of their distribution. In this study, the poorly documented Mediterranean ling (Molva macrophthalma) population from the northwestern Mediterra...

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Published in:Fishes
Main Authors: Alba Serrat, Marta Muñoz
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7040143
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2410-3888/7/4/143/ 2023-08-20T04:07:59+02:00 Can the Life History Trait Divergence of Two Extremes of a Cold-Water Genus Distribution Offer Evidence for Their Vulnerability to Sea Warming? Alba Serrat Marta Muñoz agris 2022-06-21 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7040143 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Biology and Ecology https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/fishes7040143 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Fishes; Volume 7; Issue 4; Pages: 143 reproduction Mediterranean oocyte recruitment condition deep-water fish climate vulnerability Text 2022 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7040143 2023-08-01T05:27:13Z Cold- and deep-water species such as Molva species show low resilience to anthropogenic pressures, and they become particularly vulnerable at the warm edges of their distribution. In this study, the poorly documented Mediterranean ling (Molva macrophthalma) population from the northwestern Mediterranean Sea was analysed. This area is considered a cul-de-sac in a sea-warming hotspot, where M. macrophthalma shows a low population health status and is experiencing a climate-related reduction in abundance. Several life-history traits (length at maturity, reproductive cycle, fecundity style, oocyte recruitment pattern, and breeding strategy) are here described for the first time to evaluate the reproductive performance (oocyte diameter and production) in relation to the fish condition status (the HSI and relative condition index). Additionally, the results are compared with those of a population of a similar species, the blue ling (Molva dypterygia), inhabiting the cool edge of its distribution, hypothesised to have a higher condition status. Our results indicate that M. macrophthalma is a capital breeder with restricted secondary growth recruitment and group-synchronous oocyte development. In relative terms, the stressed southern M. macrophthalma exhibited a worse condition, a lower investment in reproduction, a smaller size at maturity, larger but fewer primary growth oocytes, and a smaller size-standardized production of secondary growth oocytes than the northern M. dypterygia. Significant differences in the secondary growth oocyte recruitment were also found. These findings reinforce the environment’s role in shaping the reproductive potential and condition status. Altogether, this study suggests high sensitivity to anthropogenic pressures for both species, and, especially for Mediterranean ling, it shows the importance of introducing monitoring and conservation measures to ensure the sustainability of its populations. Text Molva dypterygia MDPI Open Access Publishing Fishes 7 4 143
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic reproduction
Mediterranean
oocyte recruitment
condition
deep-water fish
climate vulnerability
spellingShingle reproduction
Mediterranean
oocyte recruitment
condition
deep-water fish
climate vulnerability
Alba Serrat
Marta Muñoz
Can the Life History Trait Divergence of Two Extremes of a Cold-Water Genus Distribution Offer Evidence for Their Vulnerability to Sea Warming?
topic_facet reproduction
Mediterranean
oocyte recruitment
condition
deep-water fish
climate vulnerability
description Cold- and deep-water species such as Molva species show low resilience to anthropogenic pressures, and they become particularly vulnerable at the warm edges of their distribution. In this study, the poorly documented Mediterranean ling (Molva macrophthalma) population from the northwestern Mediterranean Sea was analysed. This area is considered a cul-de-sac in a sea-warming hotspot, where M. macrophthalma shows a low population health status and is experiencing a climate-related reduction in abundance. Several life-history traits (length at maturity, reproductive cycle, fecundity style, oocyte recruitment pattern, and breeding strategy) are here described for the first time to evaluate the reproductive performance (oocyte diameter and production) in relation to the fish condition status (the HSI and relative condition index). Additionally, the results are compared with those of a population of a similar species, the blue ling (Molva dypterygia), inhabiting the cool edge of its distribution, hypothesised to have a higher condition status. Our results indicate that M. macrophthalma is a capital breeder with restricted secondary growth recruitment and group-synchronous oocyte development. In relative terms, the stressed southern M. macrophthalma exhibited a worse condition, a lower investment in reproduction, a smaller size at maturity, larger but fewer primary growth oocytes, and a smaller size-standardized production of secondary growth oocytes than the northern M. dypterygia. Significant differences in the secondary growth oocyte recruitment were also found. These findings reinforce the environment’s role in shaping the reproductive potential and condition status. Altogether, this study suggests high sensitivity to anthropogenic pressures for both species, and, especially for Mediterranean ling, it shows the importance of introducing monitoring and conservation measures to ensure the sustainability of its populations.
format Text
author Alba Serrat
Marta Muñoz
author_facet Alba Serrat
Marta Muñoz
author_sort Alba Serrat
title Can the Life History Trait Divergence of Two Extremes of a Cold-Water Genus Distribution Offer Evidence for Their Vulnerability to Sea Warming?
title_short Can the Life History Trait Divergence of Two Extremes of a Cold-Water Genus Distribution Offer Evidence for Their Vulnerability to Sea Warming?
title_full Can the Life History Trait Divergence of Two Extremes of a Cold-Water Genus Distribution Offer Evidence for Their Vulnerability to Sea Warming?
title_fullStr Can the Life History Trait Divergence of Two Extremes of a Cold-Water Genus Distribution Offer Evidence for Their Vulnerability to Sea Warming?
title_full_unstemmed Can the Life History Trait Divergence of Two Extremes of a Cold-Water Genus Distribution Offer Evidence for Their Vulnerability to Sea Warming?
title_sort can the life history trait divergence of two extremes of a cold-water genus distribution offer evidence for their vulnerability to sea warming?
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7040143
op_coverage agris
genre Molva dypterygia
genre_facet Molva dypterygia
op_source Fishes; Volume 7; Issue 4; Pages: 143
op_relation Biology and Ecology
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/fishes7040143
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes7040143
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