4.5 Article

Quantitative Analysis of Ovarian Dynamics of European Sardine Sardina pilchardus (Walbaum, 1792) during Its Spawning Period

Journal

FISHES
Volume 8, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/fishes8050226

Keywords

multiple spawner; indeterminate fecundity; oocyte packing density; oocyte recruitment; de novo vitellogenesis

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This study examined the oocyte recruitment and development pattern of the European sardine, a commercially important fish with indeterminate fecundity. The study found that the recruitment and development of oocytes remained stable throughout the spawning season, with the final maturation of the advanced batch triggering the recruitment of new oocytes and the deposition of yolk in primary vitellogenic oocytes. This study provides important information for understanding reproduction and its drivers in fish with indeterminate fecundity at the individual and population level.
Fish with indeterminate fecundity spawn multiple times throughout a protracted reproductive period. During that period several ovulation events succeed one another, and different oocyte developmental stages co-occur in the ovaries with new oocytes consistently recruiting from one growth phase to the next to form the sequential batches. In this study, we examined in detail the oocyte recruitment and development pattern of the sequential batches in a commercially important fish with indeterminate fecundity, the European sardine. The numbers and sizes of oocytes at different developmental stages were estimated for four phases of the ovulatory cycle (ovarian stages) and during the main spawning season (November-March) by applying the oocyte packing density theory in combination with stereological techniques. General linear models (GLMs) were used to test for changes in oocyte sizes as well as relative oocyte numbers per developmental stage within the different ovarian stages in the successive spawning months. A temporal association between several transition events of the oocyte development process was revealed. Specifically, the final maturation of the advanced batch triggered (a) the recruitment of oocytes from primary to secondary growth phase, (b) de novo vitellogenesis and (c) a surge of yolk deposition in primary vitellogenic oocytes. Oocyte recruitment was completed two days after the ovulation of the advanced batch and relative numbers of primary and secondary growth oocytes were thereafter stable until the next final maturation event. This pattern of oocyte recruitment and growth remained unchanged during the course of the spawning season. This study advances our knowledge on oocyte recruitment and development in fish with indeterminate fecundity, which is key to understanding reproduction and its drivers at the individual and population level.

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