Tracking the time course of reproductive events in the Northeast Arctic haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus)

An important objective of fisheries management is to ensure harvest rates that allows the population to maintain its reproductive potential over time. Reproductive biology is thus of key importance when managing a fish stock as it largely determines the stock’s productivity and resilience to exploit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tronbøl, Frida
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: The University of Bergen 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2761235
Description
Summary:An important objective of fisheries management is to ensure harvest rates that allows the population to maintain its reproductive potential over time. Reproductive biology is thus of key importance when managing a fish stock as it largely determines the stock’s productivity and resilience to exploitation, yet limited information is available regarding the reproductive cycle of the presently studied Northeast Arctic (NEA) haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus) stock. Additionally, as stock assessment routines include year-specific maturity-at-age data from surveys to provide estimates of the spawning stock biomass, it is important that these maturity stage estimates are validated with more accurate methods. The purpose of the present study was first to track the time course of reproductive events in field-caught NEA haddock, and second, to evaluate maturity data and explore a rapid technique to separate stages that appear macroscopically similar. Results showed that the NEA haddock commit to maturity well before August, as seen from the presence of cortical alveoli oocytes (CAO) which prevailed as the most advanced oocyte phase for 4-5 months. Despite the early appearance of the CAO phase, the first entrance into vitellogenesis occurred in late October, marking the time of separation between females that develop ‘normally’ and mature females that will skip the spawning season. The majority (73.8 %) of skipping females reached the CAO phase and thereafter started atretic reabsorption of these oocytes. Neither liver energy storage (somatic hepatosomatic index) nor body condition (Fulton’s condition factor) could be directly linked to the occurrence of skipped spawning in the present study, although spatial and environmental factors potentially could have masked such effects. Notably, the occurrence of skipping was most common among second-time spawners (5-year-old females), apparently supporting a life-history driven mechanism for skipped spawning. The macroscopic maturity staging currently deployed during the annual ...