Affiliation:
1. Department of Integrative Biology Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA
Abstract
AbstractOtolith microstructure analysis provides critical biological and ecological information about the early life history of fishes. This information is particularly important to interpret and predict population dynamics for socio‐economically important fisheries species; nonetheless, several key assumptions underpin the use of otolith techniques. The authors validated the use of this analysis for cabezon (Scorpaenichthys marmoratus; Ayres, 1854), a long‐lived, large‐bodied cottid constituent of nearshore fisheries from Baja California, Mexico, to Alaska, USA. To test three critical assumptions, the authors coupled otolith and morphometric analyses from an opportunistic rearing study of cabezon eggs and larvae with a long‐term time series of juvenile cabezon field collections. The authors confirmed the daily otolith increment deposition in laboratory‐reared larvae, identified the timing of first otolith increment deposition and examined the relationship between otolith growth and somatic growth in field‐collected juveniles, validating the use of otolith microstructure analysis in biological and ecological interpretations of early life‐history traits for this species. The findings of this study also indicated that the absorption of yolk‐sac reserves, and likely the transition to exogenous feeding, plays an important role in regulating otolith increment deposition. Finally, the authors found within‐brood size‐at‐age variation, which may be an advantage for young fish in prey‐limited environments.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Oregon State University
Oregon Sea Grant, Oregon State University
Subject
Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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