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Featured researches published by Chiyuki Sassa.


Fisheries Science | 2008

Transport and survival processes of eggs and larvae of jack mackerel Trachurus japonicus in the East China Sea

Akihide Kasai; Kousei Komatsu; Chiyuki Sassa; Yoshinobu Konishi

Recent surveys showed substantial aggregation of larvae of jack mackerel in the southern East China Sea, indicating intensive spawning grounds near Taiwan. A numerical model was applied to investigate transport and survival processes of eggs and larvae of jack mackerel from the spawning area to the nurseries. The results show that: (i) the distributions of larvae simulated by the model agreed well with those obtained by field survey; (ii) the stock of jack mackerel in the Sea of Japan is composed of both groups from north of Taiwan and from the western coast of Kyushu. It takes more than two months for the former to reach the Sea of Japan, while it is within 40 days for the latter; and (iii) large proportions of the eggs and larvae spawned off the north of Taiwan are transported rapidly to the Pacific side of Kyushu by the Kuroshio Current, and the rest slowly to the east or north-east along the continental slope in the East China Sea. In contrast to the larval flux, survivors are more abundant in the northern East China Sea than in the Pacific Ocean, indicating that survival in the northern East China Sea would determine the jack mackerel stock in Japan.


Fisheries Science | 2005

Night‐time vertical distribution and abundance of small epipelagic and mesopelagic fishes in the upper 100 m layer of the Kuroshio–Oyashio Transition Zone in Spring

Akihiko Yatsu; Chiyuki Sassa; Masatoshi Moku; Takahiro Kinoshita

In order to simultaneously compare vertical distributions of small pelagic fishes and mesopelagic fishes during the night in the upper 100 m, one oblique and 11 horizontal tows of largesized (opening area 480 m2) trawl operations were conducted at different depths in the Kuroshio-Oyashio Transition Zone during 20–22 May 1995. While Japanese sardine Sardinops melanostictus and Japanese anchovy Engraulis japonicus were concentrated in the upper 20 m, mackerels Scomber spp. were collected uniformly in the upper 80 m layer. Myctophid fishes Ceratoscopelus warmingii, Diaphus kuroshio, Diogenichthys atlanticus, Myctophum asperum, Notoscopelus spp. mostly N. resplendens, and Symbolophorus californiensis, a gempylid Nealotus tripes, a microstomatid Lipolagus ochotensis and a phosichthyid Vinciguerria nimbaria were dominant components of mesopelagic fishes that ascended to the upper 100 m layer at night, where these mesopelagic fishes concentrated at depths of 20–80 m. In the upper 20 m layer, Japanese anchovy comprised 60% of the total wet weight of all fishes followed by D. atlanticus (3%). C. warmingii (2%) and S. californiensis (2%). Juvenile myctophids were dominant in the upper 20 m layer compared to deeper layers.


Fisheries Science | 2006

Vertical distribution of jack mackerel Trachurus japonicus larvae in the southern part of the East China Sea

Chiyuki Sassa; Yoshinobu Konishi

The vertical distribution of jack mackerel Trachurus japonicus larvae was described based on discrete depth sampling using a MTD net system from the surface down to 100 m depth at 13 stations in the southern East China Sea between 27 February and 10 March 2002. Of the 20 782 fish larvae collected, T. japonicus larvae were most abundant, accounting for 37.0% of the total catch. The average abundance of the larvae was 419.0 individuals/10 m2, with the average (±standard deviation [SD]) body length of 2.6±0.3 mm (range 1.8–7.5 mm). The larvae were concentrated in the mixed layer, with peak densities in the 10–30 m layer. The average (±SD) weighted mean depth was 21.5±7.8 m. There was no evidence of either diel or ontogenetic vertical migration for the early larvae of <5 mm. More than 90% of the T. japonicus larvae were collected in the water temperature ranging from 21 to 23°C. Vertical profiles of the larval densities and chlorophyll a coincided with each other, which might reflect the abundance of their main prey organisms, copepod nauplii and copepodites, since copepod production is known to be closely related with the chlorophyll a concentration.


Ichthyological Research | 2006

Age and growth of lanternfishes, Symbolophorus californiensis and Ceratoscopelus warmingii (Myctophidae), in the Kuroshio–Oyashio Transition Zone

Kaori Takagi; Akihiko Yatsu; Masatoshi Moku; Chiyuki Sassa

To estimate the age and growth of dominant lanternfishes in the Kuroshio–Oyashio Transition Zone, we examined the sagittal otolith microstructure of Symbolophorus californiensis (n = 30) and Ceratoscopelus warmingii (n = 93) collected from the western North Pacific during 1997–2003. Age of S. californiensis ranged from 81 to 541 days corresponding to postmetamorphosis stage (juveniles and adults), and the von Bertalanffy model was fitted: Lt = 128[1 − exp{−0.003(t − 1.52)}], where L is the standard length (mm) and t is age in days. Age of C. warmingii ranged from 6 to 416 days, and growth before metamorphosis was linear (Lt = 0.346t + 1.51), and the von Bertalanffy model was fitted to the postmetamorphosis stage: Lt = 80.8 [1 − exp{−0.00769(t − 34.4)}]. Growth of these two lanternfishes was faster than that of other lanternfishes in previous studies but considerably slower than that of Japanese sardine (Sardinops melanostictus) and anchovy (Engraulis japonicus) distributed in the Kuroshio–Oyashio Transition Zone. Temperature and prey availability are discussed in relation to this difference in growth rate.


Ichthyological Research | 2003

Early development of Diaphus garmani (Myctophidae) in the transition region of the western North Pacific

Chiyuki Sassa; Kouichi Kawaguchi; Valerie J. Loeb

Abstract We present the descriptions of the larval and transforming stages of one of the most abundant Diaphus species in the transition region of the western North Pacific, Diaphus garmani. Species identification was achieved by tracing characters backward from identifiable juveniles through transforming and larval stages. Description of the larval development includes the morphometric characteristics, pigmentation, and photophore development, which help identify the early life stages of this species.


Fisheries Science | 2012

Biomass fluctuation of two dominant lanternfish Diaphus garmani and D. chrysorhynchus with environmental changes in the East China Sea

Seiji Ohshimo; Tohya Yasuda; Hiroshige Tanaka; Chiyuki Sassa

Acoustic surveys have been conducted for estimating the biomass of commercially important fish (e.g., anchovy, jack mackerel), lanternfish (Diaphusgarmani and D. chrysorhynchus), and pearlside (Maurolicus japonicus) in summer in the East China Sea (ECS) since 1997. The biomass of lanternfish and pearlside was 2.26–19.16 times that of commercially important fish, and these species represented substantial biomass in the ECS. Though there were no correlations between biomass of pearlside and environmental indices, significant correlations between biomass of lanternfish and southern oscillation index (SOI) in March (positive correlation), arctic oscillation (AO) in March (negative) and October (positive), monsoon index (MOI) in February (positive), and Kuroshio flow mass in winter (positive) were observed. Weak AO and strong MOI would cool down the sea temperature and would lead to increased primary and secondary production in the ECS, thereby enhancing larval survival of lanternfish. The SOI would affect the Kuroshio meander in the ECS, and strong SOI and Kuroshio flow mass would transport larvae of lanternfish to the present survey area. This is the first report on the lanternfish standing stock and its fluctuation in the ECS.


Fisheries Oceanography | 2006

Distribution of jack mackerel (Trachurus japonicus) larvae and juveniles in the East China Sea, with special reference to the larval transport by the Kuroshio Current

Chiyuki Sassa; Yoshinobu Konishi; Ken Mori


Fisheries Oceanography | 2002

Horizontal and vertical distribution patterns of larval myctophid fishes in the Kuroshio Current region

Chiyuki Sassa; H. Geoffrey Moser; Kouichi Kawaguchi


Fisheries Oceanography | 2002

Assemblages of vertical migratory mesopelagic fish in the transitional region of the western North Pacific

Chiyuki Sassa; Kouichi Kawaguchi; Takahiro Kinoshita; Chikako Watanabe


Fisheries Oceanography | 2004

Distribution patterns of larval myctophid fish assemblages in the subtropical-tropical waters of the western North Pacific

Chiyuki Sassa; Kouichi Kawaguchi; Yuichi Hirota; Minoru Ishida

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Motomitsu Takahashi

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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