Quantitative determination of the timing of otolith ring formation from marginal increments in four marine teleost species from northwestern Australia


Autoria(s): Stephenson, Peter C.; Hall, Norm G.
Data(s)

2003

Resumo

The sectioned otoliths of four fish species from a tropical demersal trawl fishery in Western Australia revealed a series of alternating trans-lucent and opaque zones in reflected light. The translucent zones, referred to as growth rings, were counted to determine fish ages. The width of the opaque zone on the periphery of the otolith section as a proportion of the width of the previous opaque zone (index of completion) was used to determine the periodicity of growth-ring formation. This article describes a method for modeling changes in the index of ring completion over time, from which a parameter for the most probable time of growth-ring formation (with confidence intervals) can be determined. The parameter estimate for the timing of new growth-ring formation for Lethrinus sp. 3 was from mid July to mid September, for Lutjanus vitta from early July to the end of August, for Nemipterus furcosus from mid July to late September, and for Lutjanus sebae from mid July to mid November. The confidence intervals for the timing of formation of growth rings was variable between species, being smallest for L. vitta, and variable between fish of the same species with different numbers of growth rings. The stock assessments of these commercially important species relies on aging information for all the age classes used in the assessment. This study demonstrated that growth rings on sectioned otoliths were laid down annually, irrespective of the number of growth rings, and also demonstrated that the timing of ring formation for these tropical species can be determined quantitatively (with confidence intervals.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/15178/1/17stephe.pdf

Stephenson, Peter C. and Hall, Norm G. (2003) Quantitative determination of the timing of otolith ring formation from marginal increments in four marine teleost species from northwestern Australia. Fishery Bulletin, 101(4), pp. 900-909.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/15178/

http://fishbull.noaa.gov/1014/17stephe.pdf

Palavras-Chave #Biology #Ecology #Fisheries
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed