Comparative demography of commercially-harvested snappers and an emperor from American Samoa

The age-based life history of two commercially-important species of snapper (Lutjanidae) and one emperor (Lethrinidae) were characterized from the nearshore fishery of Tutuila, American Samoa. Examination of sagittal otoliths across multiple months and years confirmed the annual deposition of increm...

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Main Authors: Taylor, B., Oyafuso, Z., Pardee, C., Ochavillo, D., Newman, Stephen
Format: Journal Article
Published: PeerJ, Ltd. 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/69735
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author Taylor, B.
Oyafuso, Z.
Pardee, C.
Ochavillo, D.
Newman, Stephen
author_facet Taylor, B.
Oyafuso, Z.
Pardee, C.
Ochavillo, D.
Newman, Stephen
author_sort Taylor, B.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The age-based life history of two commercially-important species of snapper (Lutjanidae) and one emperor (Lethrinidae) were characterized from the nearshore fishery of Tutuila, American Samoa. Examination of sagittal otoliths across multiple months and years confirmed the annual deposition of increments and highlighted marked variation in life-history patterns among the three mesopredator species. The humpback red snapper Lutjanus gibbus is a medium-bodied gonochoristic species which exhibits striking sexual dimorphism in length-at-age and consequent growth trajectories and has a life span estimated to be at least 27 years. The yellow-lined snapper Lutjanus rufolineatus is a small-bodied gonochore with weak sexual dimorphism, early maturation, and a short life span of at least 12 years. The yellow-lip emperor Lethrinus xanthochilus is a large-bodied species with a moderate life span (estimated to be at least 19 years in this study), rapid initial growth, and a more complex sexual ontogeny likely involving pre- or postmaturational sex change, although this remains unresolved at present. Ratios of natural to fishing mortality indicate a low level of prevailing exploitation for all three species, which is supported by low proportions of immature female length classes captured by the fishery. However, considerable demographic variability among the three species highlights the value of detailed age-based information as a necessary component for informing monitoring efforts and future management decisions.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-697352018-12-11T06:00:31Z Comparative demography of commercially-harvested snappers and an emperor from American Samoa Taylor, B. Oyafuso, Z. Pardee, C. Ochavillo, D. Newman, Stephen The age-based life history of two commercially-important species of snapper (Lutjanidae) and one emperor (Lethrinidae) were characterized from the nearshore fishery of Tutuila, American Samoa. Examination of sagittal otoliths across multiple months and years confirmed the annual deposition of increments and highlighted marked variation in life-history patterns among the three mesopredator species. The humpback red snapper Lutjanus gibbus is a medium-bodied gonochoristic species which exhibits striking sexual dimorphism in length-at-age and consequent growth trajectories and has a life span estimated to be at least 27 years. The yellow-lined snapper Lutjanus rufolineatus is a small-bodied gonochore with weak sexual dimorphism, early maturation, and a short life span of at least 12 years. The yellow-lip emperor Lethrinus xanthochilus is a large-bodied species with a moderate life span (estimated to be at least 19 years in this study), rapid initial growth, and a more complex sexual ontogeny likely involving pre- or postmaturational sex change, although this remains unresolved at present. Ratios of natural to fishing mortality indicate a low level of prevailing exploitation for all three species, which is supported by low proportions of immature female length classes captured by the fishery. However, considerable demographic variability among the three species highlights the value of detailed age-based information as a necessary component for informing monitoring efforts and future management decisions. 2018 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/69735 10.7717/peerj.5069 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ PeerJ, Ltd. fulltext
spellingShingle Taylor, B.
Oyafuso, Z.
Pardee, C.
Ochavillo, D.
Newman, Stephen
Comparative demography of commercially-harvested snappers and an emperor from American Samoa
title Comparative demography of commercially-harvested snappers and an emperor from American Samoa
title_full Comparative demography of commercially-harvested snappers and an emperor from American Samoa
title_fullStr Comparative demography of commercially-harvested snappers and an emperor from American Samoa
title_full_unstemmed Comparative demography of commercially-harvested snappers and an emperor from American Samoa
title_short Comparative demography of commercially-harvested snappers and an emperor from American Samoa
title_sort comparative demography of commercially-harvested snappers and an emperor from american samoa
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/69735