Abstract
Aspects of the reproductive biology of Rhinobatos cemiculus are described from specimens collected
in Tunisian waters. Sizes at first sexual maturity of males and females are 1000 mm and 1100 mm total
length (TL), respectively. Adult females are generally larger than adult males, the maximum TL for
males and females being 1920 mm and 2300 mm, respectively. The smallest gravid female observed was
1220 mm TL. R. cemiculus is an aplacental viviparous species, with each female having two ovaries
and two uteri, both functional. Ripe oocytes in the ovaries, ova, embryos and fully developed fetuses
in the uteri are symmetrically distributed. The gestation period could last for a maximum of eight
months. Vitellogenesis proceeds in parallel with gestation, and at the time of parturition a crop of ripe
oocytes is ready to be ovulated. Ovulation and parturition occur during winter and summer, respectively.
There is probably one litter per year. The mean TL and mean weight of fully developed fetuses are
39.6 mm and 115.1 g, respectively. A computed chemical balance of development, based on the mean
dry weights of fully developed fetuses and ripe oocytes, is 1.01. This low value is due to the fact
that R. cemiculus is purely a lecithotrophic species. Fecundity ranges from 5 to 12 young per litter.
Ovarian fecundity and uterine fecundity are slightly correlated with the size of females. Females are
more numerous than males in the total sample, as well as in utero and at the juvenile stage; however,
this is not the case for subadults and adults. This phenomenon is probably due to segregation of the
sexes at different depths during certain stages of the reproductive cycle rather than to a high rate of
mortality among subadult and adult females.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
33 articles.
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