4.4 Article

Variability in maturity and growth in a heavily exploited stock:: whiting (Merlangius merlangus L.) in the Irish Sea

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JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH
卷 49, 期 1, 页码 69-82

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S1385-1101(02)00197-1

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whiting; Merlangius merlangus; sexual maturity; growth; gadoid fisheries; Irish Sea

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This paper examines the relationships between maturity, length and age of whiting sampled on a length-stratified basis from groundfish surveys of the Irish Sea during spawning in spring 1992-2001. Maturity, defined by the triggering of vitellogenesis or milt production, was a function of both length and age. Proportions of mature individuals in 1-year-old males increased successively from almost zero in length classes below 15 cm to around 0.9 at 25 cm, whilst almost all 2-year-old males were mature from their smallest length of around 19 cm. Maturity in females was more strongly linked to age than to length. Most 1-year-old females were immature, the proportion of mature individuals not exceeding 0.3 in any length class. Most 2-year-old females were mature and immature fish were found in the smallest length classes only (20-25 cm). Almost all 3-year-olds of both sexes were mature in all length classes. Proportions of mature individuals in 1-year-olds increased substantially after 1997, particularly in males. Significant positive cross-correlation between proportion mature and mean length was found for 1-year-olds of both sexes. Length at 50% maturity (L-50) averaged around 19 cm in males and 22 cm in females. Variability in L-50 was negatively cross-correlated with average sea surface temperature in the preceding year. There is no evidence for substantial changes in maturity of whiting since the 1950s, despite an order-of-magnitude reduction in biomass caused by high fishing mortality. Concomitant decreases in mean length-at-age and weight-at-age in recent decades indicate that conditions may have been unfavourable for compensatory changes in maturation. Crown Copyright (C) 2002 Published by Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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