Abstract

The present study determined whether puffer Takifugu rubripes and T. xanthopterus larvae use selective tidal stream transport (STST) for migration into the nursery area. The influence of the tidal cycle on the vertical distribution of Thkifugu larvae was investigated during a 24 h sampling period at one location off Shimabara Peninsula in Ariake Bay. Samples were collected in three depth layers, from near the sea floor to near the surface (5, 20 and 30 m depth). The change in vertical distribution in relation to tidal phase was not observed. This data did not support STST hypothesis. Diel vertical migration was observed irrespective of tidal phase, where larvae migrated to the middle layer during the night, and sank to the bottom layer during the day, however, larvae hardly emerged into the surface layer during the study period. In Ariake Bay, the residual current leads to a layered vertically stratified structure, in which surface water flows towards the mouth and the middle-bottom water flows toward inner part of the Bay. It is suggested that Takifugu larvae use not STST but residual currents for transport into the nursery ground, namely, undergoing nocturnal diel vertical migration in the water column between the middle layer and the bottom layer where the net flow is northward.

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