Abstract

Anguilla japonica and Anguilla marmorata share overlapping spawning sites, similar drifting routes, and comparable larval durations. However, they exhibit allopatric geographical distributions in East Asia. To clarify this ecological discrepancy, glass eels from estuaries in Taiwan, the Philippines, Indonesia, and China were collected monthly, and the survival rate of A. marmorata under varying water salinities and temperatures was examined. The composition ratio of these 2 eel species showed a significant latitude cline, matching the 24°C sea surface temperature isotherm in winter. Both species had opposing temperature preferences for recruitment. A. marmorata prefer high water temperatures and die at low water temperatures. In contrast, A. japonica can endure low water temperatures, but their recruitment is inhibited by high water temperatures. Thus, A. japonica glass eels, which mainly spawn in summer, are preferably recruited to Taiwan, China, Korea, and Japan by the Kuroshio and its branch waters in winter. Meanwhile, A. marmorata glass eels, which spawn throughout the year, are mostly screened out in East Asia in areas with low-temperature coastal waters in winter. During summer, the strong northward currents from the South China Sea and Changjiang River discharge markedly block the Kuroshio invasion and thus restrict the approach of A. marmorata glass eels to the coasts of China and Korea. The differences in the preferences of the recruitment temperature for glass eels combined with the availability of oceanic currents shape the real geographic distribution of Anguilla japonica and Anguilla marmorata, making them “temperate” and “tropical” eels, respectively.

Highlights

  • IntroductionFreshwater eels (genus Anguilla) are catadromous fish and have a complex life history [1]

  • Freshwater eels are catadromous fish and have a complex life history [1]

  • The differences in the preferences of the recruitment temperature for glass eels combined with the availability of oceanic currents shape the real geographic distribution of Anguilla japonica and Anguilla marmorata, making them ‘‘temperate’’ and ‘‘tropical’’ eels, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Freshwater eels (genus Anguilla) are catadromous fish and have a complex life history [1]. Subtropical ocean and have leptocephalus larvae that disperse from their oceanic spawning area to continental habitats via ocean currents where they metamorphose into glass eels [2,3,4,5]. Nineteen species and subspecies of genus Anguilla are reported worldwide; 6 of them are temperate eels that mostly have well-defined spawning and recruitment seasons [1,3], long larval durations [3], and panmictic populations [6,7,8]. Tropical eels usually have yearround recruitment because of protracted spawning seasons [3,9–. 11] and shorter larval durations than those of temperate eels [3,9], and may have multiple populations/spawning areas such as those of Anguilla marmorata [12,13,14].

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