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Original Articles

Relationship between empirical water temperature and spring characteristics of swordtip squid (Uroteuthis edulis) caught in the eastern Tsushima Strait

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Pages 93-102 | Received 30 Sep 2019, Accepted 02 Jan 2020, Published online: 29 Jan 2020
 

ABSTRACT

We analysed the data of swordtip squid Uroteuthis edulis caught in the eastern Tsushima Strait, from April to September between 2012 and 2018, to consider the relationships among mantle length and body and gonad weights, associated with the estimated seasonal migratory routes and itineraries improved by the quantitative results of the tracer experiments. Our analyses have enabled us to reveal the characteristics of kensaki-type squid and the reasons for their appearance. We identified the kensaki-type U. edulis as male individuals, caught mainly in April–June, with long slender bodies, probably adapted to empirical duration of the cold sea water temperature in the Sea of Amakusa. Researchers and fishermen have referred to the seasonal migrating group including such males as a spring-migrating group. However, the females belonging to the spring-migrating group had no kensaki-type characteristics. Moreover, contrary to that achieved by the males, the female squid had acquired greater maturation in the spring than in any other seasons. These data demonstrated that the females continued to grow to maturation even in the cold sea waters, implying a different female strategy for reproduction from that of male squid. We are concerned that the commercially valuable kensaki-type squid may decrease in the future because the water temperature in the northern East China Sea is gradually rising, probably due to global climate change.

Acknowledgments

We express our sincere thanks to the Kumamoto Prefectural Fisheries Research Center for supplying the marine research data of the Sea of Amakusa. We are grateful to M. Koga, E. Arisuda and R. Shimokawa (Saga Prefectural Genkai Fisheries R & D Center) for the assistance for specimen collections and biological measurements. This study was supported by Saga Prefecture and the Fisheries Agency of Japan.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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