Size-at-Age in Haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus): Application of the Growing Degree-Day (GDD) Metric

While growth variation in fishes is the result of a number of different factors (temperature, food consumption, genetic composition, etc.), temperature has been identified as one controlling factor on fish size-at-age. Thus, variation in size-at-age due to variation in temperature should be explaine...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anna B. Neuheimer, Christopher T. Taggart, Kenneth T. Frank
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.554.2745
http://www.phys.ocean.dal.ca/~taggart/Publications/neuheimer_etal2008_SeaGrant.pdf
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Summary:While growth variation in fishes is the result of a number of different factors (temperature, food consumption, genetic composition, etc.), temperature has been identified as one controlling factor on fish size-at-age. Thus, variation in size-at-age due to variation in temperature should be explained before the other factors are explored. We argue that the relevant metric for explaining temperature-dependent size-at-age variation in most fishes is physiologically relevant temperature; i.e., the thermal integral parameterized as the growing degree-day (GDD, ºC × d) metric. Accordingly, we employ GDD to examine the change in size-at-age (length-at-day, LaD) among eastern Scotian Shelf (Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization statistical divisions 4VW) haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus) from 1970 through 2003. Significant varia-tion in length-at-day (LaD) among year classes (decline in slopes and intercepts of LaD-at-GDD relations) remains after LaD variation due to GDD (temperature) is explained. The unexplained variation is postulated to be a result of temperature-independent factors such as condition or size-selective fishing or both. 112 Neuheimer et al.—Size-at-Age in Haddock