Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T12:06:59.829Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Fecundity of Icelandic Plaice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2009

T. B. Bagenal
Affiliation:
The Marine Station, Millport

Extract

This paper is one of a series on the fecundity of the plaice Pleuronectes platessa L. over a wide area of its geographical distribution and is concerned with the number of ripening eggs in the roes of female Icelandic plaice prior to spawning (see Bagenal, 1962, for references to other areas).

Thirty-eight plaice were caught by the Icelandic research vessel ‘Maria Julia’ on 23 and 24 March 1961 in the Midnessjor area. They were measured and weighed and the otoliths were extracted. The ovaries were preserved in modified Gilson's fluid (Simpson, 1951). I am very grateful to Mr Jon Jonsson who kindly made all the arrangements and Mr Gunnar Joakimsson who prepared the material in Iceland. The fish were very ripe and a few had developed translucent eggs, but spawning had not begun. The subsampling and statistical treatment of the results were the same as before (Bagenal, 1962). The otoliths, after being kept dry, were very difficult to read.

The Icelandic plaice are an isolated population, separated by deep water from the rest of Europe, and there are several spawning areas. currents move clockwise round Iceland and will carry the fertilized eggs and young larvae from Midnessjor and the S.W. coast spawning areas (Thomsen, 1948) to the good nursery grounds of Faxa Bay. Tåning (1929, 1948) has given accounts of the Faxa Bay plaice biology and suggests that ‘the eggs and tiny fry, which are found in the Bay in the spring months, seem mainly to come from the outside, for the greater part most probably from S.W. Iceland’. The eggs from the population offish considered in this paper, from Midnessjór, would drift into Faxa Bay which forms a good nursery ground.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1963

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bagenal, T. B., 1960. The fecundity of English Channel plaice. J. mar. biol. Ass. U.K., Vol. 39, pp. 249–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bagenal, T. B., 1962. The fecundity of plaice from the coasts of Norway. J. mar. biol. Ass. U.K., Vol. 42, pp. 105–12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milinsky, G. I., 1938. Biology and fishery of the plaice (Pleuronectes platessa) in the Barents Sea. Trans. Knipovich polyar set. Inst., Vol. 2, pp. 5992. [In Russian: English summary.]Google Scholar
Simpson, A. C., 1951. The fecundity of the plaice. Fish. Invest., Lond., Ser. 2, Vol. 17, No. 5, 27 pp.Google Scholar
Taning, A. V., 1929. Plaice investigations in Icelandic waters. Rapp. Cons. Explor. Mer, Vol. 57, 134 pp.Google Scholar
Taning, A. V., 1948. The plaice in Faxa Bay. Rapp. Cons. Explor. Mer, Vol. 120, No. 9, pp. 3945.Google Scholar
Thomsen, H., 1948. The hydrographic conditions in Faxa Bay. Rapp. Cons. Explor. Mer, Vol. 126, No. 5, pp. 30–1.Google Scholar
Wimpenny, R. S., 1953. The Plaice. 145 pp. London.Google Scholar