Ab. Thompson et al., DISTRIBUTION AND BREEDING BIOLOGY OF OFFSHORE PELAGIC CYPRINIDS AND CATFISH IN LAKE-MALAWI-NIASSA, Environmental biology of fishes, 47(1), 1996, pp. 27-42
Lake Malawi/Niassa is a permanently stratified lake, consisting of an
oxygenated layer of 230 m depth that overlies an anoxic zone that exte
nds to the lake bottom at a maximum depth of over 700 m. Some fish are
found throughout the oxygenated zone of the offshore waters, and lead
a pelagic existence, although many of the species form part of the de
mersal community in shallower waters where the lake-bed is oxygenated.
This paper reports on the distribution of cyprinids and catfish at si
x offshore locations, sampled with a mid-water trawl and gillnets, alo
ng the north-south axis of the lake. These two groups formed, respecti
vely, 5% and 13% of the offshore fish biomass in the trawl catches. Th
e offshore cyprinids comprised the small lake-spawning Engraulicypris
sardella, the only species to have pelagic larvae, and the larger rive
r-spawning Opsaridium microcephalum and O. microlepis. These cyprinids
occurred mainly in the upper 100 m of the water column. The biomass o
f both larvae and adults of E. sardella showed considerable fluctuatio
ns over the two years of study. The spawning site of E. sardella remai
ns a mystery, but is no longer believed to be in the offshore pelagic
zone. The most abundant catfish was the mochokid Synodontis njassae, t
hat exhibited diurnal movements from just above the oxic-anoxic bounda
ry layer during the day to the surface layers at night. The clariid ca
tfish of the genus Bathyclarias were caught infrequently offshore, but
owing to their large size, they could form a significant part of the
biomass. Their abundance was difficult to quantify, as it was believed
that the majority are active in the nearsurface layers and were under
-sampled by the trawl and gillnets. Information on some aspects of the
breeding biology is included in the paper, although our knowledge in
this area is very incomplete.