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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Lipid compositions, water contents, swimbladder morphologies and specific gravities were studied for 19 species of oceanic midwater fishes, chiefly myctophids (lanternfishes) collected offshore from Oregon and California from 1975–1979. Three groups of species were recognizable. The first group had bodies low in both lipid and water content; they were denser than seawater, regardless of swimbladder morphology, which varied from absent through non-inflated to inflated. The second group had bodies low in lipid but high in water content; they were neutrally buoyant, evidently because of their high content of water, although their swimbladders were never inflated. The majority of the members of the aforementioned groups contained higher proportions of triglycerides than wax esters. The third group had bodies with high lipid but low water content; those with high triglyceride content had swimbladders ranging from non-inflated to (less commonly) inflated, were denser than seawater, and the lipid percentage of their body weights varied both with size and season, indicating that triglycerides function mainly as an energy store. The adults of species in the third group with a higher content of wax esters than triglycerides lacked inflated swimbladders, were neutrally buoyant, and the lipid percentage of their body weights was relatively constant with size and season, indicating that wax esters permit these fishes to attain neutral buoyancy in seawater.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The bioluminescent fish Porichthys notatus (plainfin midshipman), has a discontinuous distribution along the Pacific coast of North America. The fish is present from Cape Mendocino southward to Baja California, Mexico, absent off the coast of Oregon, USA, and abundant, northward, in Puget Sound, Washington. Interestingly, the population in Puget Sound lacks the substrate (luciferin) necessary for the luminescence reaction and, despite possessing an otherwise fully functional photophore system, is nonluminescent. The California population of P. notatus is uniformly luminescent south of Monterey Bay, but 15% of the speciments tested from San Francisco Bay and the Gulf of the Farallons have been reported to be nonluminescent. Explanations for nonluminescent midshipman in both Puget Sound and the San Francisco Bay area have focussed on a dietary requirement for luciferin. To gain further insight into reasons for nonluminescence in the San Francisco Bay region, the distribution of bioluminescence in P. notatus was studied from Monterey Bay to Cape Mendocino during 1985. A complex pattern of bioluminescence was found, in which nonluminescent individuals reflected neither a local anomaly in the San Francisco Bay region nor a simple gradient of decreasing luminescence towards the northern end of the range of the California population. Instead, a distinct size-dependent component in luminescence capability of the fish was observed. Aspects of the life history of P. notatus and related factors which might influence the bioluminescence characteristics of this population are discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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