Archival tagging reveals swimming depth and ambient and peritoneal cavity temperature in age-0 Pacific bluefin tuna, Thunnus orientalis, off the southern coast of Japan

2017 
Although archival tags have been deployed in Thunnus since the early 1990s, few studies have placed such loggers on the small-size growth stage. In this study, Pacific bluefin tuna (PBT, Thunnus orientalis) 20–26.5 cm in fork length (FL) were fitted with archival tags and released off the southern coastal area of Japan from July to August in 2012, 2013, and 2014. Time-series data on swimming depth, ambient water temperature, and peritoneal cavity temperatures collected at 30-s intervals during 78–144 days were analyzed in 11 age-0 PBT. In August, the age-0 PBT spent 69.5 to 83.4% of their time within the mixed layer at mean temperatures between 27.6 and 28.3 °C, while previous studies reported that PBT with FL > 50 cm in the East China Sea are found most often in zones with temperatures between 14 and 19 °C. The thermal difference between the peritoneal cavity and ambient temperature was less than 1 °C for age-0 PBT in August, indicating that they were not in danger of overheating. The mean daytime swimming depths of age-0 PBT were significantly and positively correlated with the depth of the thermocline, especially from August to October. By focusing their swimming depths around the thermocline, the age-0 PBT potentially maximize the probability of encountering prey. There was a significant correlation between the mean nighttime depth and lunar illumination. The change in vertical distribution with the lunar cycle during nighttime is likely a form of predator avoidance.
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