Age, Growth, Mortality, and Reproduction of Roughtongue Bass, Pronotogrammus martinicensis (Serranidae), in the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico

The inaccessibility of outer continental shelf reefs has made it difficult to investigate the biology of Pronotogrammus martinicensis, a small sea bass known to be numerous and widely distributed in such habitat. This study takes advantage of a series of cruises in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico th...

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Published in:Gulf of Mexico Science
Main Authors: McBride, Richard S., Sulak, Kenneth J., Thurman, Paul E., Richardson, Adam K.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: The Aquila Digital Community 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://aquila.usm.edu/goms/vol27/iss1/4
https://doi.org/10.18785/goms.2701.04
https://aquila.usm.edu/context/goms/article/1500/viewcontent/goms_27_01_30_38.pdf
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spelling ftsouthmissispun:oai:aquila.usm.edu:goms-1500 2023-07-30T04:05:32+02:00 Age, Growth, Mortality, and Reproduction of Roughtongue Bass, Pronotogrammus martinicensis (Serranidae), in the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico McBride, Richard S. Sulak, Kenneth J. Thurman, Paul E. Richardson, Adam K. 2009-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://aquila.usm.edu/goms/vol27/iss1/4 https://doi.org/10.18785/goms.2701.04 https://aquila.usm.edu/context/goms/article/1500/viewcontent/goms_27_01_30_38.pdf unknown The Aquila Digital Community https://aquila.usm.edu/goms/vol27/iss1/4 doi:10.18785/goms.2701.04 https://aquila.usm.edu/context/goms/article/1500/viewcontent/goms_27_01_30_38.pdf Gulf of Mexico Science text 2009 ftsouthmissispun https://doi.org/10.18785/goms.2701.04 2023-07-15T18:37:50Z The inaccessibility of outer continental shelf reefs has made it difficult to investigate the biology of Pronotogrammus martinicensis, a small sea bass known to be numerous and widely distributed in such habitat. This study takes advantage of a series of cruises in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico that collected 1,485 individuals. Fish were collected over or in the vicinity of reef habitats with hook and line, otter trawl, and rotenone. We present a preliminary validation of an otolith ageing method and report that P. martinicensis reached a maximum size of 143 mm standard length (SL), grew to about 50% of this size within their first year, and lived to a maximum age of 15 yr. Size at age data (n = 490) fitted to the von Bertalanffy growth model yielded the predictive equation: SLt = 106.3(1 - e[-0.641{t-0.646}]), where t = age in years. Gonad histology (n = 333) was examined to confirm that P. martinicensis is a protogynous, monandric hermaphrodite. We found no evidence of simultaneous hermaphroditism, which had been tentatively proposed in a previous study. Most P. martinicensis matured as females in their second year (age 1), primary oocytes developed asynchronously into secondary oocytes, and females were batch spawners. Males were postmaturational. Seminiferous tissue formed as early as age 1, but, although the rate of sex change is unknown, most fish did not function as a male until age 3 or age 4. These data provide age-based benchmarks of a common reef fish species living on the outer continental shelf of the tropical western North Atlantic Ocean. Text North Atlantic The University of Southern Mississippi: The Aquila Digital Community Gulf of Mexico Science 27 1
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Southern Mississippi: The Aquila Digital Community
op_collection_id ftsouthmissispun
language unknown
description The inaccessibility of outer continental shelf reefs has made it difficult to investigate the biology of Pronotogrammus martinicensis, a small sea bass known to be numerous and widely distributed in such habitat. This study takes advantage of a series of cruises in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico that collected 1,485 individuals. Fish were collected over or in the vicinity of reef habitats with hook and line, otter trawl, and rotenone. We present a preliminary validation of an otolith ageing method and report that P. martinicensis reached a maximum size of 143 mm standard length (SL), grew to about 50% of this size within their first year, and lived to a maximum age of 15 yr. Size at age data (n = 490) fitted to the von Bertalanffy growth model yielded the predictive equation: SLt = 106.3(1 - e[-0.641{t-0.646}]), where t = age in years. Gonad histology (n = 333) was examined to confirm that P. martinicensis is a protogynous, monandric hermaphrodite. We found no evidence of simultaneous hermaphroditism, which had been tentatively proposed in a previous study. Most P. martinicensis matured as females in their second year (age 1), primary oocytes developed asynchronously into secondary oocytes, and females were batch spawners. Males were postmaturational. Seminiferous tissue formed as early as age 1, but, although the rate of sex change is unknown, most fish did not function as a male until age 3 or age 4. These data provide age-based benchmarks of a common reef fish species living on the outer continental shelf of the tropical western North Atlantic Ocean.
format Text
author McBride, Richard S.
Sulak, Kenneth J.
Thurman, Paul E.
Richardson, Adam K.
spellingShingle McBride, Richard S.
Sulak, Kenneth J.
Thurman, Paul E.
Richardson, Adam K.
Age, Growth, Mortality, and Reproduction of Roughtongue Bass, Pronotogrammus martinicensis (Serranidae), in the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico
author_facet McBride, Richard S.
Sulak, Kenneth J.
Thurman, Paul E.
Richardson, Adam K.
author_sort McBride, Richard S.
title Age, Growth, Mortality, and Reproduction of Roughtongue Bass, Pronotogrammus martinicensis (Serranidae), in the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico
title_short Age, Growth, Mortality, and Reproduction of Roughtongue Bass, Pronotogrammus martinicensis (Serranidae), in the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico
title_full Age, Growth, Mortality, and Reproduction of Roughtongue Bass, Pronotogrammus martinicensis (Serranidae), in the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico
title_fullStr Age, Growth, Mortality, and Reproduction of Roughtongue Bass, Pronotogrammus martinicensis (Serranidae), in the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico
title_full_unstemmed Age, Growth, Mortality, and Reproduction of Roughtongue Bass, Pronotogrammus martinicensis (Serranidae), in the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico
title_sort age, growth, mortality, and reproduction of roughtongue bass, pronotogrammus martinicensis (serranidae), in the northeastern gulf of mexico
publisher The Aquila Digital Community
publishDate 2009
url https://aquila.usm.edu/goms/vol27/iss1/4
https://doi.org/10.18785/goms.2701.04
https://aquila.usm.edu/context/goms/article/1500/viewcontent/goms_27_01_30_38.pdf
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Gulf of Mexico Science
op_relation https://aquila.usm.edu/goms/vol27/iss1/4
doi:10.18785/goms.2701.04
https://aquila.usm.edu/context/goms/article/1500/viewcontent/goms_27_01_30_38.pdf
op_doi https://doi.org/10.18785/goms.2701.04
container_title Gulf of Mexico Science
container_volume 27
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