Oceanic cephalopod distribution and species diversity in the eastern north Atlantic.

This work provides a baseline against which we might measure future changes to oceanic midwater cephalopod stability in the eastern North Atlantic It records a considerable sampling effort from 1959 to 1986 aimed at oceanic midwater cephalopods made by the author and colleagues in the eastern North...

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Main Author: Clarke, Malcolm R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Universidade dos Açores 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/195
id ftunivacores:oai:repositorio.uac.pt:10400.3/195
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivacores:oai:repositorio.uac.pt:10400.3/195 2023-05-15T17:31:01+02:00 Oceanic cephalopod distribution and species diversity in the eastern north Atlantic. Clarke, Malcolm R. 2006 http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/195 eng eng Universidade dos Açores Ciências Biológicas e Marinhas = Life and Marine Sciences; "ARQUIPÉLAGO. Ciências Biológicas e Marinhas". ISSN 0873-4704. Nº 23A (2006): 27-46 0873-4704 http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/195 openAccess Cefalópodes Cephalopoda Moluscos Marinhos Marine Molluscs Açores Azores article 2006 ftunivacores 2022-05-01T14:29:56Z This work provides a baseline against which we might measure future changes to oceanic midwater cephalopod stability in the eastern North Atlantic It records a considerable sampling effort from 1959 to 1986 aimed at oceanic midwater cephalopods made by the author and colleagues in the eastern North Atlantic between approximately 10ºN to 70ºN and 0ºto 30ºW. From these samples the latitudinal distribution, the biodiversity and, to some extent, the relative rarity of the species present in the area is shown. Over 700 collections were made with a range of nets from small plankton nets to large commercial trawls of many designs. As an independent measure of the efficiency of our sampling, the species represented by lower beaks from the stomach contents of 241 sperm whales (Physeter catodon) caught or stranded at five different localities in the area are listed and discussed. In total, over 40,000 cephalopods of 82 oceanic midwater species and 16 shelf and slope species were identified and are included here. The number of midwater species caught by nets increases regularly from 11ºN to 32ºN and decreases from 32ºN to 60ºN. A sharp increase at 32ºN of about 10 species above the curve produced by the catches at other stations is very probably due to the use of lights on the nets at this position. This suggests that further use of lights at all stations might elevate the curve at each position commensurate with the numbers of species found by conventional nets. The number of midwater cephalopods caught by nets in each of the 32 families show that Cranchiidae are by far the most numerous (and speciose) followed by Pyroteuthidae and Enoploteuthidae at half the number. 18 families numbered less than 100 individuals. Families eaten by sperm whales showed that Histioteuthidae was by far the most numerous (22787) with Cranchiidae (3285), Octopoteuthidae (1710) and Cycloteuthidae (1360) following in importance. Architeuthidae was not caught by nets but was present in the whale diet (221). The scarcity and expense of net collections suggests that estimates of cephalopod distribution and relative numbers should rely more on analysis of the diet of predators than on net catches. The value of monitoring cephalopods in the deep ocean is discussed. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Repositório da Universidade dos Açores Catodon ENVELOPE(-59.966,-59.966,-63.500,-63.500)
institution Open Polar
collection Repositório da Universidade dos Açores
op_collection_id ftunivacores
language English
topic Cefalópodes
Cephalopoda
Moluscos Marinhos
Marine Molluscs
Açores
Azores
spellingShingle Cefalópodes
Cephalopoda
Moluscos Marinhos
Marine Molluscs
Açores
Azores
Clarke, Malcolm R.
Oceanic cephalopod distribution and species diversity in the eastern north Atlantic.
topic_facet Cefalópodes
Cephalopoda
Moluscos Marinhos
Marine Molluscs
Açores
Azores
description This work provides a baseline against which we might measure future changes to oceanic midwater cephalopod stability in the eastern North Atlantic It records a considerable sampling effort from 1959 to 1986 aimed at oceanic midwater cephalopods made by the author and colleagues in the eastern North Atlantic between approximately 10ºN to 70ºN and 0ºto 30ºW. From these samples the latitudinal distribution, the biodiversity and, to some extent, the relative rarity of the species present in the area is shown. Over 700 collections were made with a range of nets from small plankton nets to large commercial trawls of many designs. As an independent measure of the efficiency of our sampling, the species represented by lower beaks from the stomach contents of 241 sperm whales (Physeter catodon) caught or stranded at five different localities in the area are listed and discussed. In total, over 40,000 cephalopods of 82 oceanic midwater species and 16 shelf and slope species were identified and are included here. The number of midwater species caught by nets increases regularly from 11ºN to 32ºN and decreases from 32ºN to 60ºN. A sharp increase at 32ºN of about 10 species above the curve produced by the catches at other stations is very probably due to the use of lights on the nets at this position. This suggests that further use of lights at all stations might elevate the curve at each position commensurate with the numbers of species found by conventional nets. The number of midwater cephalopods caught by nets in each of the 32 families show that Cranchiidae are by far the most numerous (and speciose) followed by Pyroteuthidae and Enoploteuthidae at half the number. 18 families numbered less than 100 individuals. Families eaten by sperm whales showed that Histioteuthidae was by far the most numerous (22787) with Cranchiidae (3285), Octopoteuthidae (1710) and Cycloteuthidae (1360) following in importance. Architeuthidae was not caught by nets but was present in the whale diet (221). The scarcity and expense of net collections suggests that estimates of cephalopod distribution and relative numbers should rely more on analysis of the diet of predators than on net catches. The value of monitoring cephalopods in the deep ocean is discussed.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Clarke, Malcolm R.
author_facet Clarke, Malcolm R.
author_sort Clarke, Malcolm R.
title Oceanic cephalopod distribution and species diversity in the eastern north Atlantic.
title_short Oceanic cephalopod distribution and species diversity in the eastern north Atlantic.
title_full Oceanic cephalopod distribution and species diversity in the eastern north Atlantic.
title_fullStr Oceanic cephalopod distribution and species diversity in the eastern north Atlantic.
title_full_unstemmed Oceanic cephalopod distribution and species diversity in the eastern north Atlantic.
title_sort oceanic cephalopod distribution and species diversity in the eastern north atlantic.
publisher Universidade dos Açores
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/195
long_lat ENVELOPE(-59.966,-59.966,-63.500,-63.500)
geographic Catodon
geographic_facet Catodon
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation Ciências Biológicas e Marinhas = Life and Marine Sciences;
"ARQUIPÉLAGO. Ciências Biológicas e Marinhas". ISSN 0873-4704. Nº 23A (2006): 27-46
0873-4704
http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/195
op_rights openAccess
_version_ 1766128316438282240