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Observations on fishes caught over the anoxic waters of the Cariaco Trench, Venezuela

Identifieur interne : 007C95 ( Istex/Corpus ); précédent : 007C94; suivant : 007C96

Observations on fishes caught over the anoxic waters of the Cariaco Trench, Venezuela

Auteurs : Giles W. Mead

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:FC82F259611E943EED0115CEC2B5195BF4A51F2A

English descriptors

Abstract

Abstract: During Cruise 26 of the R/V Chain, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, several bathypelagic collections were made using closing gear and depth telemeter equipment developed by the National Institute of Oceanography in Great Britain, and the Isaacs-Kidd midwater trawl. One such station was over the Cariaco Trench, Venezuela; another over adjacent but open waters of the Caribbean. At each, two samples were obtained: the first from 0 to 400 m depth, the second 400 to about 600 m. The deep haul at the Trench station fished anoxic waters and the catch was meagre save for a large number of Bregmaceros atlanticus, a fish which should be examined for physiological or anatomical adaptations to anaerobic existence. The catch from similar depths north of the sill was in no respect unusual. Although both shallow hauls fished waters in part amenable to pelagic life, they differed in the nature if not the number of fishes caught. It is suggested that certain groups of fishes and perhaps larger invertebrates as well are compelled to migrate vertically diurnally, a fatal instinct for an animal descending to the anoxic and sulphurous waters of the Cariaco Trench. Confirmation is needed; the single Trench station should be repeated many times. Notes on species identity and distribution are given, and Scopelengys whoi is described as new.

Url:
DOI: 10.1016/0011-7471(63)90361-9

Links to Exploration step

ISTEX:FC82F259611E943EED0115CEC2B5195BF4A51F2A

Le document en format XML

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<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Abstract: During Cruise 26 of the R/V Chain, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, several bathypelagic collections were made using closing gear and depth telemeter equipment developed by the National Institute of Oceanography in Great Britain, and the Isaacs-Kidd midwater trawl. One such station was over the Cariaco Trench, Venezuela; another over adjacent but open waters of the Caribbean. At each, two samples were obtained: the first from 0 to 400 m depth, the second 400 to about 600 m. The deep haul at the Trench station fished anoxic waters and the catch was meagre save for a large number of Bregmaceros atlanticus, a fish which should be examined for physiological or anatomical adaptations to anaerobic existence. The catch from similar depths north of the sill was in no respect unusual. Although both shallow hauls fished waters in part amenable to pelagic life, they differed in the nature if not the number of fishes caught. It is suggested that certain groups of fishes and perhaps larger invertebrates as well are compelled to migrate vertically diurnally, a fatal instinct for an animal descending to the anoxic and sulphurous waters of the Cariaco Trench. Confirmation is needed; the single Trench station should be repeated many times. Notes on species identity and distribution are given, and Scopelengys whoi is described as new.</div>
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<note>Contribution No. 1310 from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. The field and laboratory work on which this study is based was provided to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution through Contract Nonr 2196 (00), with the Office of Naval Research; and to Harvard University through National Science Foundation grant G 15887, support here gratefully acknowledged.</note>
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<abstract lang="en">Abstract: During Cruise 26 of the R/V Chain, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, several bathypelagic collections were made using closing gear and depth telemeter equipment developed by the National Institute of Oceanography in Great Britain, and the Isaacs-Kidd midwater trawl. One such station was over the Cariaco Trench, Venezuela; another over adjacent but open waters of the Caribbean. At each, two samples were obtained: the first from 0 to 400 m depth, the second 400 to about 600 m. The deep haul at the Trench station fished anoxic waters and the catch was meagre save for a large number of Bregmaceros atlanticus, a fish which should be examined for physiological or anatomical adaptations to anaerobic existence. The catch from similar depths north of the sill was in no respect unusual. Although both shallow hauls fished waters in part amenable to pelagic life, they differed in the nature if not the number of fishes caught. It is suggested that certain groups of fishes and perhaps larger invertebrates as well are compelled to migrate vertically diurnally, a fatal instinct for an animal descending to the anoxic and sulphurous waters of the Cariaco Trench. Confirmation is needed; the single Trench station should be repeated many times. Notes on species identity and distribution are given, and Scopelengys whoi is described as new.</abstract>
<note>Contribution No. 1310 from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. The field and laboratory work on which this study is based was provided to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution through Contract Nonr 2196 (00), with the Office of Naval Research; and to Harvard University through National Science Foundation grant G 15887, support here gratefully acknowledged.</note>
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