The First Record of a Spawning Ground of the Mud Skate Bathyraja taranetzi (Dolganov, 1983) and the Okhotsk Skate B. violacea (Suvorov, 1935) in Pacific Waters off the Northern Kuril Islands

2020 ◽  
Vol 46 (6) ◽  
pp. 501-505
Author(s):  
A. A. Balanov ◽  
V. V. Panchenko ◽  
A. B. Savin

Abstract.—Spiny dogfish <em>Squalus acanthias </em>are occasionally caught by bottom trawls in the Pacific waters off the northern Kuril Islands and southeastern Kamchatka. Only 23 specimens were captured during 8 years of commercial and research cruise observations from 1993 to 2000. This species occurred most frequently off the southeastern coast of Kamchatka within a depth range of 200–300 m and a bottom temperature range of 2°–3°C. In the study area, this shark was represented by specimens with total lengths of 54–85 cm (69.2 cm average) and body weights of 1–3 kg (1.8 kg average). Dogfish were captured in the Pacific waters off the northern Kuril Islands and southeastern Kamchatka from July to December. Maximum catch rates occurred in November and were probably related to southward migrations.


ISRN Zoology ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. Orlov ◽  
A. M. Tokranov

Spatial and vertical distributions, size-weight compositions, age, and diets of 10 rare or poorly known snailfish (Liparidae) from the Pacific off the southeastern Kamchatka and the northern Kuril Islands are described. The species include blacktip snailfish Careproctus zachirus, Alaska snailfish C. colletti, blacktail snailfish C. melanurus, proboscis snailfish C. simus, falcate snailfish C. cypselurus, big-disc snailfish Squaloliparis dentatus, longtip snailfish Elassodiscus obscurus, slender snailfish Paraliparis grandis, gloved snailfish Palmoliparis beckeri, and stout snailfish Allocareproctus jordani. These species inhabit a wide range of depths. Careproctus melanurus, C. cypselurus, E. obscurus, P. grandis, and C. colletti are the deepest; C. simus and S. dentatus occur mostly between 300 and 600 m; the three other species seldom occur at depths of 150–200 m. The life span of these species is 10–13 years, and specimens of age classes 2–5 constitute the bulk of catches. All except A. jordani are benthophages that eat small crustaceans, shrimps, hermit crabs, and amphipods. A. jordani consumes crustaceans and also polychaete worms, sea snails, octopi, brittle stars, juvenile fish, and fishery offal.


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