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Background. Tadpole codling, Salilota australis (Günther, 1878), (known also as red cod) and southern blue whiting, Micromesistius australis Norman, 1937, are two commercially important species, which spawning grounds are situated in the Falkland waters. Nothing is known about duration of the embryonic development in these fish, whereas these data are necessary to study life cycle strategies as well as for stock management. Because of this, experiments with artificial egg fertilisation were carried out onboard a research boat that was the only way to obtain such an information. Materials and Methods. Eggs from each species were taken from running females captured on their spawning grounds and then fertilised. Egg samples were collected every 6 hours and stage of embryonic development was assigned using a dissecting microscope. Results. Tadpole codling eggs are of 1.20–1.55 mm, with an oil globule of 0.29–0.33 mm, incubation takes between 140–150 h at 6–8.5ºC, 40–45 degree-days. Larval size at hatching is ca 2.9 mm TL. Blue whiting eggs are of 1.40–1.55 mm with no oil globule. Development takes from 150 h at a mean temperature of 7.15ºC to 200 h at between 5.5 and 6ºC, 45–50 degree-days. Larval size at hatching is 2.8–3.0 mm. Conclusion. Duration of embryonic development for commercial southwest Atlantic gadiform fish, tadpole codling, Salilota australis, and southern blue whiting, Micromesistius australis, is documented for the first time. It allows to draw some conclusions about possible mortality during this ontogenetic stage (assuming that daily rates are similar to those in other similar species) and to hypothesise about possible egg transport by currents and interannual spawning grounds’ variability.
During a survey of the parasite fauna of the euryhaline notothenioid fish Eleginops maclovinus (Cuvier) caught in brackish water creeks in the Falkland Islands, small white cysts were observed in the mesenteries and on the surfaces of the visceral organs and heart. On dissection these proved to be plasmodia of a species of the myxosporean genus Henneguya. This is the first record of a member of this genus from a marine or euryhaline fish in the south-west Atlantic. A comparison of the spore of our species with other species in the genus convinced us that our species is new. This paper describes it as Henneguya shackletoni sp. nov. after the Shackleton Fund which funded the study.
Two new myxozoan species are described from the musculature of fish caught around the Falkland Islands. Kudoa ramsayi sp. n. was found in three of 23 specimens of the marine nototheniid fish Patagonotothen ramsayi (Regan). Its spores differ in size and shape from those of Kudoa alliaria Shulman et Kovaleva, previously reported from the same host. Myxobolus bartoni sp. n. was found in one of six specimens of the diadromous fish Galaxias maculatus (Jenyns). Although four species of the genus Myxobolus have been reported from fish of the genus Galaxias elsewhere, this is the first report of a Myxobolus from G. maculatus in the Falkland Islands. It differs from the other four species in spore morphometrics and internal structure. In addition, we propose the name Myxobolus olidus nom. nov. to replace M. galaxii Langdon, 1990, which is preoccupied by M. galaxii Szidat, 1953.
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