Summary of Dosidicus gigas size, sex, and maturity from squid obtained in Santa Rosalia, Baja California Sur, Mexico from 2013-2014 (Jumbo Squid El Nino Response project)

Website: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/615859
Version: 13 October 2015
Version Date: 2015-10-13

Project
» Adaptable life history strategy of a migratory large predator in response to El Nino and climate change (Jumbo Squid El Nino Response)
ContributorsAffiliationRole
Gilly, WilliamStanford UniversityPrincipal Investigator
Rauch, ShannonWoods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)BCO-DMO Data Manager


Dataset Description

Summary of Dosidicus gigas size, sex, and maturity from squid obtained from commercial fishermen in Santa Rosalia, Baja California Sur, Mexico (27.3N 112.1W).


Methods & Sampling

Squid were obtained from artisanal commercial fishermen in Santa Rosalia, Baja California Sur, Mexico, where they were captured at night by jigging with hand lines and weighted, luminescent jigs. Squid were taken from the commercial loading dock to a laboratory facility within 6 hours of being captured and sampled in the laboratory. Length was measured with a flexible tape, generally to the nearest 0.1 cm. Mass was weighed with a digital hanging scale to the nearest 0.01 kg. Sex and maturity were visually determined following criteria for Stages 1-5 (Lipinski & Underhill, 1995): Stage I–II = immature, Stage III = maturing, Stage IV–V = mature. (See also Hoving et al. 2013.)

References:
Lipinski MR, Underhill LG. 1995. Sexual maturation in squid: quantum or continuum. South African Journal of Marine Science, 15, 207–223. doi:10.2989/02577619509504844

Hoving H.-J, Gilly WF, Markaida U, Benoit-Bird KJ, West-Brown Z, Daniel P, Field JC, Parassenti L, Liu B, Campos B. 2013. Extreme plasticity in life-history strategy allows a migratory predator (Dosidicus gigas) to cope with a changing climate. Global Change Biology 19:2089 –2103. doi:10.1111/gcb.12198


Data Processing Description

Summary data have been reduced from the raw data recorded for every squid sampled. Raw data can be provided by the PI on request.

BCO-DMO data processing:
- modified parameter names to conform with BCO-DMO naming conventions;
- added min/max columns based on the existing range columns;
- re-formatted range columns;
- added site lat and lon as provided on the metadata sheet;
- replaced "-" with "nd" to indicate "no data".


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Data Files

File
santa_rosalia.csv
(Comma Separated Values (.csv), 4.18 KB)
MD5:697a3353281a2277251ac95a2df137e5
Primary data file for dataset ID 615859

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Parameters

ParameterDescriptionUnits
yearFour-digit year. YYYY
siteName of site where squid were obtained. text
latLatitude of sampling. Positive = North. decimal degrees
lonLongitude of sampling. Positive = East. decimal degrees
date_localDate of sampling (local time). mm/dd/yyyy
NNumber of squid sampled. integer
DML_meanMean dorsal mantle length (DML). centimeters (cm)
DML_sdStandard deviation of mean dorsal mantle length (DML). centimeters (cm)
DML_rangeRange of dorsal mantle length (DML). centimeters (cm)
DML_minMinimum dorsal mantle length (DML). centimeters (cm)
DML_maxMaximum dorsal mantle length (DML). centimeters (cm)
mass_meanMean mass. kilograms (kg)
mass_sdStandard deviation of mean mass. kilograms (kg)
mass_rangeRange of mass. kilograms (kg)
mass_minMinimum mass. kilograms (kg)
mass_maxMaximum mass. kilograms (kg)
maturity_meanMean sexual maturity state (1-5). Sexual maturity state 1-5
maturity_sdStandard deviation of mean sexual maturity state. Sexual maturity state 1-5
maturity_rangeRange of sexual maturity state. Sexual maturity state 1-5
maturity_minMinimum sexual maturity state. Sexual maturity state 1-5
maturity_maxMaximum sexual maturity state. Sexual maturity state 1-5
female_pcntPercent female. percentage (%)
female_mature? fraction
male_pcntPercent male. percentage (%)
male_mature? fraction

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Deployments

Gilly_SR_13-14

Website
Platform
Santa_Rosalia
Start Date
2013-06-29
End Date
2014-08-13


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Project Information

Adaptable life history strategy of a migratory large predator in response to El Nino and climate change (Jumbo Squid El Nino Response)

Coverage: Gulf of California and Monterey Bay


Description from NSF award abstract:
This project will examine the response of Dosidicus gigas (Humboldt squid) to an El Niño event in 2009-2010 that was accompanied by a collapse of the commercial fishery for this squid in the Guaymas Basin within the Gulf of California. This large squid is a major predator of great ecological and economic importance in the Gulf of California, the California Current, and Peru Current systems. In early 2010, these squid abandoned their normal coastal-shelf habitats in the Guaymas Basin and instead were found in the Salsipuedes Basin to the north, an area buffered from the effects of El Niño by the upwelling of colder water. The commercial fishery also relocated to this region and large squid were not found in the Guaymas Basin from 2010-2012, instead animals that matured at an unusually small size and young age were abundant. A return to the large size-at-maturity condition has still not occurred, despite the apparent return of normal oceanographic conditions.

The El Niño of 2009-2010 presented an unforeseen opportunity to reveal an important feature of adaptability of Dosidicus gigas to an acute climatic anomaly, namely a large decrease in size and age at maturity. Now these investigators will have the opportunity to document recovery to the normal large size-at-maturity condition. The specific aims of this project are:

1) continue a program of acoustic surveys and direct sampling of squid that has already been established in the Gulf of California in order to assess distribution, biomass, life history strategy diet, and migratory and foraging behaviors relative to pre-El Niño conditions and
2) conduct analogous surveys in Monterey Bay, California in conjunction with long-term remote operated vehicle surveys of squid abundance.

The data from these studies will provide a comparison of recovery in the two different squid populations and yield valuable insights into what ecological effects an area is expected to experience with an invasion of either small or large Humboldt squid. As long-term climate change progresses, squid of both forms may expand northward into the California Current System.

Related Project: Hypoxia and the ecology, behavior and physiology of jumbo squid, Dosidicus gigas



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Funding

Funding SourceAward
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)

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