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Beak measurements of octopus (Octopus variabilis) in Jiaozhou Bay and their use in size and biomass estimation
Authors:Ying Xue  Yiping Ren  Wenrong Meng  Long Li  Xia Mao  Dongyan Han  Qiuyun Ma
Institution:12194. Fisheries College, Ocean University of China, Qingdao, 266003, P. R. China
22194. Oceanic and Fishery Administration of Lianyun District, Lianyungang, 222042, P. R. China
32194. Nantong Station, Regional Bureau of East China Sea Fishery Management, Ministry of Agriculture of China, Nantong, 226006, P. R. China
Abstract:Cephalopods play key roles in global marine ecosystems as both predators and preys. Regressive estimation of original size and weight of cephalopod from beak measurements is a powerful tool of interrogating the feeding ecology of predators at higher trophic levels. In this study, regressive relationships among beak measurements and body length and weight were determined for an octopus species (Octopus variabilis), an important endemic cephalopod species in the northwest Pacific Ocean. A total of 193 individuals (63 males and 130 females) were collected at a monthly interval from Jiaozhou Bay, China. Regressive relationships among 6 beak measurements (upper hood length, UHL; upper crest length, UCL; lower hood length, LHL; lower crest length, LCL; and upper and lower beak weights) and mantle length (ML), total length (TL) and body weight (W) were determined. Results showed that the relationships between beak size and TL and beak size and ML were linearly regressive, while those between beak size and W fitted a power function model. LHL and UCL were the most useful measurements for estimating the size and biomass of O. variabilis. The relationships among beak measurements and body length (either ML or TL) were not significantly different between two sexes; while those among several beak measurements (UHL, LHL and LBW) and body weight (W) were sexually different. Since male individuals of this species have a slightly greater body weight distribution than female individuals, the body weight was not an appropriate measurement for estimating size and biomass, especially when the sex of individuals in the stomachs of predators was unknown. These relationships provided essential information for future use in size and biomass estimation of O. variabilis, as well as the estimation of predator/prey size ratios in the diet of top predators.
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