Contrasting the early life histories of sympatric Arctic gadids Boreogadus saida and Arctogadus glacialis in the Canadian Beaufort Sea

2016 
The early life stages of Boreogadus saida and Arctogadus glacialis are morphologically similar, making it difficult to assess differences in their ecological niche. The present study documented for the first time the early life stage ecology of A. glacialis, compared it to that of B. saida, and identified the factors separating the niches of the two sympatric species. The 10,565 larval gadids collected in the Beaufort Sea from April to August of 2004 and 2008 were identified to species either directly by genetics and/or otolith nucleus size, or indirectly with a redistribution procedure. Between 8.0 and 8.7 % of all gadids were assigned to A. glacialis. Larvae of A. glacialis were longer at hatch and experienced lower mortality rates than those of B. saida. The two species shared similar spatiotemporal and vertical distributions, hatching season, and growth rate. Under the ice, feeding incidence of B. saida was low (14 %) relative to A. glacialis (88 %). At lengths 15 mm overlapped (Schoener’s index = 0.7), with Calanus glacialis and C. hyperboreus providing >50 % of the carbon intake of both species. The higher mortality in B. saida may be explained by the smaller size at age from hatching to metamorphosis and a lower under-ice feeding incidence. The early larval stage appears to be the key period of niche divergence between the two species.
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