Abstract
The pelagic fish egg fauna of the Nova Scotian shelf consists of 16 species plus 5 predominantly slope species that occasionally drift onto the shelf. In 9 of these 21 species there were no morphological characters that could be used to identify early, pre-embryonic eggs. In the remainder, chorion structure, egg diameter, or egg versus oil globule diameter scattergrams could be used to completely or partially diagnose species identities. A key to the 21 species of eggs is presented. Seasonal variation was observed in egg sizes and adult sizes, with species attaining a large body size producing large eggs in colder months, while smaller species producing smaller eggs (usually with an oil globule) spawned in warmer months. These seasonal patterns appear related to buoyancy requirements, metabolic rates, first feeding requirements, and phylogenetic constraints. -from Authors
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CITATION STYLE
Markle, D. F., & Frost, L. A. (1985). Comparative morphology, seasonality, and a key to planktonic fish eggs from the Nova Scotian shelf. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 63(2), 246–257. https://doi.org/10.1139/z85-038
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