Home Home

CCAMLR

Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources

  • Home
  • Skip to Content
  • Log in

Search form

  • About CCAMLR
  • Conservation measures
  • Science
  • Fisheries
  • Compliance
  • Data
  • Meetings
  • Publications
  • Circulars
  • English
  • Français
  • Русский
  • Español
  • Home
Print this page
Increase font size
Decrease font size

There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

Abstract: 

Samples of the squid, Martialia hyadesi, were collected aboard two Japanese squid jigging vessels carrying out commercial fishing trials at the Antarctic Polar Frontal Zone, north Scotia Sea in February 1989. The dissected stomachs of 61 specimens were classified according to fullness and the contents examined visually. Identifiable food items included fish sagital otoliths, crustacean eyes, the lappets on euphausiid first antennule segments and cephalopod sucker rings. The most frequent items in the squid's diet were the myctophid fishes Krefftichthys anderssoni and Electrona carlsbergi, the euphausiid Euphausia superba and a hyperiid amphipod, probably Themisto gaudichaudi. A small proportion of the sample had been feeding cannibalistically. Total lengths of the fish prey were estimated from sagital otolith size using published relationships. All fish were relatively small; 7- 35% of squid mantle length. Over the size range of squid in the sample there was no relationship between size of fish prey and size of squid. Similarly, when the squid sample was divided into groups according to prey categories: Crustacea, Crustacea + fish, fish, cephalopod, there was no evidence that dietary preference was related to squid size. The prevalence of copepod-feeding myctophids in the diet of this squid, which is itself a major prey item of some higher predators In the Scotia Sea, suggests that a previously unrecognised food chain: copepod - myctophid - Martialia hyadesi - higher predator, may be an important component of the Antarctic oceanic ecosystem.

There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

There is no abstract available for this document.

Pages

  • « first
  • ‹ previous
  • …
  • 1072
  • 1073
  • 1074
  • 1075
  • 1076
  • 1077
  • 1078
  • 1079
  • 1080
  • …
  • next ›
  • last »
Subscribe to CCAMLR RSS

Contact us

Email: ccamlr [at] ccamlr [dot] org
Telephone: +61 3 6210 1111
Fax: +61 3 6224 8744
Address: 181 Macquarie Street, Hobart, 7000, Tasmania, Australia

 

Quick Links

  • Job vacancies
  • Schedule of Conservation Measures in Force 2024/25
  • CCAMLR Venue Hire
  • High Pathogenicity Avian Influenza (HPAI) resources

Recent and Upcoming Meetings

  • WG-SAM-2025
  • WG-ASAM-2025
  • WG-EMM-2025
  • Log in
  • CCAMLR e-groups
  • CCAMLR Discussions
  • Support
  • Copyright
  • Disclaimer and Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Webmail
© Copyright - the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources 2025, All rights reserved.  |  Top of page  |  Site by Eighty Options