The food source of Sargasso Sea leptocephali

The mysterious food source of anguilliform leptocephali has been difficult to understand, so this review evaluates potential interrelationships among recent discoveries on this subject. There are typically few identifiable gut-content objects in lepto-cephalus intestines, which usually contain amorp...

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Published in:Marine Biology
Main Authors: Miller, Michael J., Hanel, Reinhold, Feunteun, Eric, Tsukamoto, Katsumi
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-020-3662-6
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spelling ftopenagrar:oai:www.openagrar.de:openagrar_mods_00058918 2023-06-18T03:36:01+02:00 The food source of Sargasso Sea leptocephali Miller, Michael J. Hanel, Reinhold Feunteun, Eric Tsukamoto, Katsumi 2020 https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-020-3662-6 https://www.openagrar.de/receive/openagrar_mods_00058918 https://www.openagrar.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/openagrar_derivate_00029383/dn062256.pdf eng eng Marine biology : international journal on life in oceans and coastal waters -- Mar. Biol. -- Mar Biol (Berlin) -- MAR BIOL (BERL) -- 0025-3162 -- 1432-1793 -- 1117-4 https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-020-3662-6 https://www.openagrar.de/receive/openagrar_mods_00058918 https://www.openagrar.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/openagrar_derivate_00029383/dn062256.pdf only signed in user all rights reserved info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Text ddc:570 article Text 2020 ftopenagrar https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-020-3662-6 2023-06-04T23:06:22Z The mysterious food source of anguilliform leptocephali has been difficult to understand, so this review evaluates potential interrelationships among recent discoveries on this subject. There are typically few identifiable gut-content objects in lepto-cephalus intestines, which usually contain amorphous materials. Gut content observation studies and stable isotope research have suggested that marine snow detrital-type particles are a food source, but this was difficult to validate. Recent gut-content DNA-sequence analyses indicated that small 4–25 mm Sargasso Sea European eel larvae, Anguilla anguilla, frequently ingest calycophoran siphonophore tissues as well as other taxa not likely to be ingested individually. A high-magnification photographic study of Sargasso Sea leptocephalus gut contents recently detected possible hydrozoan tentacles and apparent fatty acid-rich single-celled, heterotrophic thraustochytrid protists (class Labyrinthulomycetes), which have been found in marine snow in previous studies, but are not amplified by some DNA primers. Calycophoran siphonophores are abundant in the Sargasso Sea and have extensive tentacle arrays and short-lived eudoxid reproductive stages that might be appropri-ate sizes to be eaten directly or contribute to marine snow aggregates. The two groups may be interrelated because thraus-tochytrids are ubiquitously present decomposers that colonize detrital materials in oceanic and coastal ecosystems, so both siphonophore tissues and thraustochytrids may be present in marine snow consumed by European eel and other leptocephali. Therefore, future research on what leptocephali consume as food should be approached from a size-scaling perspective using systematic direct gut-content observations in combination with appropriate primers for next-generation DNA sequencing. Article in Journal/Newspaper Anguilla anguilla OpenAgrar (OA) Marine Biology 167 5
institution Open Polar
collection OpenAgrar (OA)
op_collection_id ftopenagrar
language English
topic Text
ddc:570
spellingShingle Text
ddc:570
Miller, Michael J.
Hanel, Reinhold
Feunteun, Eric
Tsukamoto, Katsumi
The food source of Sargasso Sea leptocephali
topic_facet Text
ddc:570
description The mysterious food source of anguilliform leptocephali has been difficult to understand, so this review evaluates potential interrelationships among recent discoveries on this subject. There are typically few identifiable gut-content objects in lepto-cephalus intestines, which usually contain amorphous materials. Gut content observation studies and stable isotope research have suggested that marine snow detrital-type particles are a food source, but this was difficult to validate. Recent gut-content DNA-sequence analyses indicated that small 4–25 mm Sargasso Sea European eel larvae, Anguilla anguilla, frequently ingest calycophoran siphonophore tissues as well as other taxa not likely to be ingested individually. A high-magnification photographic study of Sargasso Sea leptocephalus gut contents recently detected possible hydrozoan tentacles and apparent fatty acid-rich single-celled, heterotrophic thraustochytrid protists (class Labyrinthulomycetes), which have been found in marine snow in previous studies, but are not amplified by some DNA primers. Calycophoran siphonophores are abundant in the Sargasso Sea and have extensive tentacle arrays and short-lived eudoxid reproductive stages that might be appropri-ate sizes to be eaten directly or contribute to marine snow aggregates. The two groups may be interrelated because thraus-tochytrids are ubiquitously present decomposers that colonize detrital materials in oceanic and coastal ecosystems, so both siphonophore tissues and thraustochytrids may be present in marine snow consumed by European eel and other leptocephali. Therefore, future research on what leptocephali consume as food should be approached from a size-scaling perspective using systematic direct gut-content observations in combination with appropriate primers for next-generation DNA sequencing.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Miller, Michael J.
Hanel, Reinhold
Feunteun, Eric
Tsukamoto, Katsumi
author_facet Miller, Michael J.
Hanel, Reinhold
Feunteun, Eric
Tsukamoto, Katsumi
author_sort Miller, Michael J.
title The food source of Sargasso Sea leptocephali
title_short The food source of Sargasso Sea leptocephali
title_full The food source of Sargasso Sea leptocephali
title_fullStr The food source of Sargasso Sea leptocephali
title_full_unstemmed The food source of Sargasso Sea leptocephali
title_sort food source of sargasso sea leptocephali
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-020-3662-6
https://www.openagrar.de/receive/openagrar_mods_00058918
https://www.openagrar.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/openagrar_derivate_00029383/dn062256.pdf
genre Anguilla anguilla
genre_facet Anguilla anguilla
op_relation Marine biology : international journal on life in oceans and coastal waters -- Mar. Biol. -- Mar Biol (Berlin) -- MAR BIOL (BERL) -- 0025-3162 -- 1432-1793 -- 1117-4
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-020-3662-6
https://www.openagrar.de/receive/openagrar_mods_00058918
https://www.openagrar.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/openagrar_derivate_00029383/dn062256.pdf
op_rights only signed in user
all rights reserved
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-020-3662-6
container_title Marine Biology
container_volume 167
container_issue 5
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