Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T20:30:47.587Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

New record of Ocythoe tuberculata (Cephalopoda: Ocythoidae) in the north-east Atlantic related to sea warming

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2009

Ángela M. Caballero-Alfonso
Affiliation:
Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Campus Universitario de Tafira, Ciencias Básicas, 35017, Las Palmas, Spain
Unai Ganzedo-López
Affiliation:
AZTI-Tecnalia, Marine Research Division, Txatxarramendi Ugartea z/g 48395, Sukarrieta, Bizkaia, Spain
Guzmán Díez-Díez
Affiliation:
AZTI-Tecnalia, Marine Research Division, Txatxarramendi Ugartea z/g 48395, Sukarrieta, Bizkaia, Spain
José J. Castro*
Affiliation:
Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Campus Universitario de Tafira, Ciencias Básicas, 35017, Las Palmas, Spain
*
Correspondence should be addressed to: José J. Castro, Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Campus Universitario de Tafira, Ciencias Básicas 35017, Las Palmas, Spain email: [email protected]
Get access

Abstract

The capture of two females of Ocythoe tuberculata during the summer of 2006, in the north-east Atlantic is reported. This pelagic cephalopod species are rare beyond subtropical waters and were caught at the sea surface by two live-bait boats. The appearance of this species in the area is related with an anomalous sea warming.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2009

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

REFERENCES

Bouxin, S. and Legendre, R. (1936) La fauna pelagique de l'Atlantique recueillie dans des estomacs de germons au large de Golfe de Gascogne. II: Cephalopodes. Annales de l'Institut Oceanographique 16, 199.Google Scholar
Cardoso, F. (1991) First record of net collected Ocythoe tuberculata (Cephalopoda: Octopoda) from Peruvian waters. American Malacological Bulletin 8, 143144.Google Scholar
Cardoso, F. and Paredes, C. (1998) La familia Ocythoidae (Cephalopoda: Octopoda) en el Perú. Revista Peruana de Biología 5, 7 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Casey, K.S. (2004) Nighttime-only monthly climatological mean SST (1985–2001), standard deviation, and counts based on RSMAS/NODC 4 km AVHRR Pathfinder version 5.0 sea surface temperature dataset. Silver Spring, MD, USA: NOAA National Oceanographic Data Center.Google Scholar
Castro, J.J. and Ramos, A.G. (2002) The occurrence of Ranzania laevis off the island of Gran Canaria, the Canary Islands, related to sea warming. Journal of Fish Biology 60, 271273.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, M.R. (1986) A handbook for the identification of cephalopod beaks. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Ezzeddine-Najai, S. and El Abed, A. (2001) Sur una espèce nouvelle dans la faune teuthologique de Tunisie: Ocytehoe tuberculata Rafinesque, 1814 (Cephalopoda, Octopoda). www.instm.rnrt.tn/dwl/pub8_2001.pdfGoogle Scholar
Landsdell, M. and Young, J. (2007) Pelagic cephalopods from eastern Australia: species composition, horizontal and vertical distribution determined from the diets of pelagic fishes. Review of Fish Biology and Fisheries 17, 125138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Galicia, La Voz (2006) La ola de calor multiplica los ataques de medusas a los bañistas de Samil, 7th June 2006. (http://www.lavozdegalicia.es/hemeroteca/2006/06/07/4841243.shtml)Google Scholar
Naef, A. (1923) Die cephalopoden. Fauna e Flora de Golfo di Napoli. Monograph 35 1(2), 150863.Google Scholar
Nesis, K.N. (1985) Oceanic cephalopod molluscs: distribution, life form and evolution. Moscow: Nauka Press. [In Russian.]Google Scholar
Okutani, T. and Osuga, K. (1994) A peculiar nesting behavior of Ocythoe tuberculata in the test of a gigantic salp, Tethys vagina. Venus 45, 6769.Google Scholar
O'shea, S. (1997) Status of three Octopoda recorded from New Zealand, based on beaks recovered from long-distance foraging marine predators. New Zealand Journal of Zoology 24, 265266.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Packard, A. and Wurtz, M. (1994) An octopus, Ocythoe, with a swimbladder and triple jets. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B 344, 261275.Google Scholar
Petrus, J.L. and Pablo, F. de (1993) Nota sobre la captura d' Ocythoe tuberculata Rafinesque, 1814 (Cephalopoda: Ocythoidae) en aigues de Menorca. Bolleti de la Societat d'Historia Natural de les Balears 36, 6263.Google Scholar
Pickford, G.E. and McConnaughey, B.H. (1949) The Octopus bimaculatus problem: a study in sibling species. Bulletin of the Bingham Oceanographic Collection 12, 166.Google Scholar
Roper, C. and Sweeney, M.J. (1975) The pelagic Octopod Ocythoe tuberculata Rafinesque, 1814. Bulletin of the American Malacological Union, 1975, 2128.Google Scholar
Roper, C.F.E. and Voss, G.L. (1983) Guidelines for taxonomic descriptions of cephalopod species. Memoirs of the National Museum of Victoria 44, 4963.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sweeney, M.J., Roper, C.F.E., Mangold, K.M., Clarke, M.R. and Boletzky, S.v. (eds) (1992) “Larval” and juvenile cephalopods: a manual for their identification, vol. 513. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology, 232 pp.Google Scholar
Thomas, R.F. (1977) Systematics, distribution and biology of cephalopocis of the genus Tremoctopus (Octopoda: Tremoctopodidae). Bulletin of Marine Science 27, 353392.Google Scholar
Vechione, M. (2002) Cephalopods. In Carpenter, K.E. (ed.) The living marine resources of the western central Atlantic, vol. 1. FAO: Rome.Google Scholar