Biometric studies on premetamorphic eel larvae of Anguilla anguilla (Anguilliformes: Anguillidae) in comparison with younger developmental stages of the species

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Abstract

387 premetamorphic leptocephali of the family Ajiguillidae caught off the west coast of Europe were examined taxonoimcally and compared with the youngest developmental stages of larvae of Anguilla anguilla caught in the Sargasso Sea 1979 (Schoth, 1982). The total number of myomeres and the number of myomeres up to the third, opistonephritic blood vessel present features of this species which are significantly different from those of the larvae of Anguilla rostrata and do not change during the whole larval phase. A combination of these two biometric features enables an infallible species identification of the Atlantic Anguilla larvae at all developmental stages. The number of predorsal and preanal myomeres, the preanal length and features of the head cannot be used for a distinction of Anguilla larvae. One larva, 68.7 mm long, with 107 myomeres, and 44 myomeres to the opistonephritic blood vessel represents the hitherto southernmost record of an A. rostrata larva in the eastern North Atlantic.

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Strehlow, B. (1997). Biometric studies on premetamorphic eel larvae of Anguilla anguilla (Anguilliformes: Anguillidae) in comparison with younger developmental stages of the species. Helgolander Meeresuntersuchungen, 50(3), 415–424. https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02367113

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