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Bluefin tuna larvae

Bluefin tuna larvae
Bluefin tuna larvae
Bluefin tuna larvae
Bluefin tuna larvae
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462153
Hernandez, Chrissy
Bluefin tuna larvae
Still Image
06/13/2017
LarvalTuna2.jpg
Image Of the Day caption:
Bluefin tuna are the largest of all tuna speciesadults can reach ten feet in length and weigh more than a thousand pounds. But they start out small, as 2- to 3-millimeter-long larvae. This one was caught by MIT-WHOI Joint Program graduate student Chrissy Hernandez in the Slope Sea, a region of the Atlantic Ocean between the between the U.S. continental shelf and the Gulf Stream farther offshore. The area is a newly-recognized spawning ground for western Atlantic bluefin tunamore good news for a species whose population in the Gulf of Mexico is sustainably managed with a limited harvest.
Caption from Oceanus online:
Bluefin tuna larvae are 2 to 3 millimeters long when they hatch, but they can grow quickly, adding roughly 0.5 millimeter per day. This larva was caught by Chrissy Hernandez, a graduate student in the MIT-WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography, in the Slope Seaa recently discovered spawning area for bluefin tuna. Hernandez estimated it was at least 10 days old.
Used in Oceanus magazine, Vol. 57, No. 2, Pg. 6.
Photo by Chrissy Hernandez
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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