Publication | Open Access
Life history, growth and production of Neomysis integer in the Westerschelde estuary (SW Netherlands)
93
Citations
19
References
1994
Year
The Neomysis integer (Leach, 1814) (Crustacea, Mysidacea) population of the brackish part of the Westerschelde estuary was sampled on a fortnightly basis from November 1990 to December 1991. Denslty, biomass, population structure and brood size were recorded. The Bhattacharya method was applied to the length-frequency data for the detection and separation of cohorts. Growth is described both by a generalised von Bertalanffy function and by a von Bertalanffy function incorporating seasonal oscdlations in growth. Secondary production was estimated for each cohort using 4 approaches. The seasonal pattern in density and biomass showed 3 peaks: a relatively small, yet distinct, peak in early March (30 ind. m-2, 60 mg AFDW m-*) and 2 main peaks in late spring (160 ind. m-'. 225 mg AFDW m-2) and in summer (140 ind. m-2. 125 mg AFDW m-2). Throughout winter, N. integer density remained well below 30 ind. m-2 Three periods of increased reproductive activity and subsequent input of juveniles were found. Thls suggests that 3 cohorts were produced per year. The overwintering generat~on lived from autumn until the following spring. The spring generation was born in early spring and lived for about 3 mo, while the summer generation lived from summer until early winter. The 3 cohorts showed marked differences in their biology. The overwintering generation showed seasonal growth oscillations, larger brood size and a larger size at maturity. Individuals belonging to the other 2 cohorts generally grew faster, produced less young per female, and attained maturity at a smaller size. Within each cohort, both sexes exhibited different growth characteristics: females generally lived longer, grew faster and consequently became larger than males. The size-frequency, growth summation and removal summation methods yielded comparable production estimates. The annual production was 0 3 g AFDW yr-' with an annual P/B ratio of 6. The average cohort P/B was 3. The size-frequency method gave similar results only when applied to the 3 cohorts and to both sexes separately. The spring cohort accounted for almost half of the annual production. Despite the longer life span of the overwintering generation, it generated only a quarter of the annual production. An independent estimate of product~on using the mortality rate of the different cohorts resulted in values comparable to those obtained by the other methods for the overwintering cohort, while the production of the other 2 cohorts was overestimated.
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