A Magnetic Map Leads Juvenile European Eels to the Gulf Stream


Loading...

Date

2017-04

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

Migration allows animals to track the environmental conditions that maximize growth, survival, and reproduction [1, 2, 3]. Improved understanding of the mechanisms underlying migrations allows for improved management of species and ecosystems [1, 2, 3, 4]. For centuries, the catadromous European eel (Anguilla anguilla) has provided one of Europe’s most important fisheries and has sparked considerable scientific inquiry, most recently owing to the dramatic collapse of juvenile recruitment [5]. Larval eels are transported by ocean currents associated with the Gulf Stream System from Sargasso Sea breeding grounds to coastal and freshwater habitats from North Africa to Scandinavia [6, 7]. After a decade or more, maturing adults migrate back to the Sargasso Sea, spawn, and die [8]. However, the migratory mechanisms that bring juvenile eels to Europe and return adults to the Sargasso Sea remain equivocal [9, 10]. Here, we used a “magnetic displacement” experiment [11, 12] to show that the orientation of juvenile eels varies in response to subtle differences in magnetic field intensity and inclination angle along their marine migration route. Simulations using an ocean circulation model revealed that even weakly swimming in the experimentally observed directions at the locations corresponding to the magnetic displacements would increase entrainment of juvenile eels into the Gulf Stream System. These findings provide new insight into the migration ecology and recruitment dynamics of eels and suggest that an adaptive magnetic map, tuned to large-scale features of ocean circulation, facilitates the vast oceanic migrations of the Anguilla genus [7, 13, 14].

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

27 (8)

Pages / Article No.

1236 - 1240

Publisher

Cell Press

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Anguilla anguilla; Animal migration; Animal navigation; Magnetic orientation; Ocean currents; Sargasso Sea; Sensory ecology

Organisational unit

03705 - Jokela, Jukka / Jokela, Jukka check_circle

Notes

Funding

Related publications and datasets