Lifetime hormone profiles for a long-lived teleost: opercula reveal novel estimates of age-specific reproductive parameters and stress trends in yelloweye rockfish (Sebastes ruberrimus)

Author:

Charapata Patrick1ORCID,Oxman Dion2,McNeel Kevin2,Keith Alexa1,Mansouri Farzaneh3,Trumble Stephen1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Baylor University, Waco, TX 76707, USA

2. Alaska Department of Fish & Game, Division of Commercial Fisheries, Mark Tag and Age Laboratory, Juneau, AK 99801, USA

3. Department of Environmental Science, Baylor University, Waco, TX 76706, USA

Abstract

Fisheries management relies on accurate population models for estimating biomass and setting harvest goals; however, physiological data for estimating reproductive parameters in population models are difficult to acquire. Here, lifetime reproductive (progesterone and estradiol) and stress-related (cortisol) hormones were measured in annually deposited growth increments in female yelloweye rockfish ( Sebastes ruberrimus) opercula ( N = 22 females, sampled ages 1–90 years). Analyses of these profiles (∼1-year resolution) provided estimates of physiological (complete puberty) and functional age of sexual maturity (females spawn and contribute larvae to the population) and spawning frequency, with lifetime trends of reproduction and stress. The descriptive mean age of physiological sexual maturity was 11 ± 1 years (standard error (SE)), whereas functional age of maturity was 17 ± 2 years. The estimate of marginal mean spawning frequency was 45.1% ± 5.1%. Stress data (∼15% of females experienced distress events) suggested that females were potentially resilient or not exposed to chronic stressors. Although preliminary, we provide a novel method to estimate age-specific reproductive parameters for proper age-based population modeling of a human-targeted teleost.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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