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Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

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Marine fish eggs and larvae from the east coast of South Africa
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Marine fish eggs and larvae from the East coast of South Africa Dirk Steinke, Allan Connell, Tyler Zemlak, Paul Hebert
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Page 1: Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

Marine fish eggs and larvae from theEast coast of South Africa

Dirk Steinke, Allan Connell, Tyler Zemlak, Paul Hebert

Page 2: Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

History

Allan Connell

Page 3: Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

1985 - a major effluent pipeline was about to begin discharging industrial effluent over a shallow continental shelf area in Richards Bay

1985 - surface plankton samples were collected, over several years, to assess the diversity of fish species spawning in the area, and the intensity and seasonality of spawning.

1986 – a second study in Park Rynie was started in order to collect alive specimens.

1987 – cataloguing of eggs and hatched larvae started

2004 – DNA Barcoding was added to the procedure(including sampling of adults for reference library)

History

Page 4: Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

Work flow

• By collecting both offshore (5km) and inshore (0.5km) a reasonable assessment of location of spawning was obtained for all the common eggs in the study area.

• A simple “key” based on the physical features of pelagic fish eggs, was used to separate eggs into basic groups.

• eggs were hatched and both eggs and larvae were photographed.

• once larvae had fully pigmented eyes, theywere anaesthetised with MS222, prior to fixing in 98% alcohol for DNA Barcoding.

• other larvae were reared to the point where fin counts and juvenile features aided in identification.

Page 5: Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

Work flow

• DNA extraction was done using standard protocols at the CCDB.

• A reduced elution volume was used.

• PCR used Fish Cocktail (Ivanova 2007).

• Sequences were queried against BOLD using its Identification Engine (only 100% were considered).

• reared larvae of the same batch were fixed in formalin and serve as‘para-vouchers’

Page 6: Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

Today

• some 2100 larvae have been barcoded since 2005

• the local adult reference library (assembled in parallel) contains some 900 species

• some 1500 species of marine fishes from South Africa are barcoded

• 9000 fish species have been barcoded world-wide

Page 7: Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

0 500 1000 1500 20000

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

Are we done?

Phy

loge

netic

Div

ersi

ty (

PD

)

# barcodes

• PD calculated using Conserve based on NJ trees generated in MEGA 4.0

• Sample size progressively increased by 10 random sequences

Page 8: Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

Results

• 1638 specimens (78%) could be identified using BOLD

• they represent 280 known species

• 10 of those are new records for South Africa

• the remaining 22% could not be matched to any barcode sequence on BOLD or GenBank.

Page 9: Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

% Offshore

% Inshore

Monodactylus falciformis Cubiceps pauciradiatusPomadasys olivaceus

Some observations

Page 10: Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

Mean monthly eggs per sample, averaged over 24 years

Trends

Page 11: Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

Trends

• large rainfall causing mud to be washed out from rivers• the high nutrient load of such a deluge caused massive increase in egg

numbers• three most prolific pelagic egg spawners: Sardinops sagax, Etrumeus

teres, and Scomber japonicus

Page 12: Dirk Steinke - Vertebrates Plenary

www.fisheggsandlarvae.com

Acknowledgements:

Erin CorstorphineTyler ZemlakPhilip Heemstra

Biodiversity Institute of Ontario

Thank you!


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