Data from: Assessing reproductive behavior important to fisheries management: a case study with red drum, Sciaenops ocellatus
Spawning site selection and reproductive timing affect stock productivity and structure in marine fishes but are poorly understood. Traditionally, stock assessments measure reproductive potential as spawning stock biomass or egg production and do not include other aspects of reproductive behavior. R...
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Zusammenfassung: | Spawning site selection and reproductive timing affect stock productivity
and structure in marine fishes but are poorly understood. Traditionally,
stock assessments measure reproductive potential as spawning stock biomass
or egg production and do not include other aspects of reproductive
behavior. Red drum make an excellent case study to assess these other
aspects, as (1) they are highly fecund, pelagic spawners, like most
exploited marine fishes; (2) their life cycle is delineated between
nursery (estuarine) and adult (coastal and offshore) habitat; and (3) they
are managed at these two spatial scales. This study was conducted from
August 2012 to December 2013 and integrates data from multiple methods and
spatial scales. Aerial surveys were used for large-scale monitoring of
aggregations off two known estuarine nursery areas, Tampa Bay and
Charlotte Harbor, Florida, USA. Capture-based sampling in Tampa Bay
coastal (n = 2581) and estuarine waters (n = 158) was used to assess
reproductive state and to confirm coastal spawning. To assess spatial
dynamics, we acoustically tagged two population components in the Tampa
Bay system, subadults from the estuary (n = 20) and adults from the
coastal spawning site (n = 60). Behavioral plasticity was seen in subadult
recruitment to coastal habitat, with some subadults maturing and
recruiting before or during the spawning season and others (14 of 20
acoustically tagged fish) recruiting at the end of the 2012 spawning
season. Both adults and recruited subadults (n = 29) were consequently
detected in the Charlotte Harbor array, 132 km to the south. Spawning-site
fidelity to the Tampa Bay spawning site occurred at both the population
and individual scales. Aggregations consistently occurred in Tampa Bay
coastal waters during the spawning season, and approximately two-thirds of
tagged adults returned in the 2013 spawning season. A similar proportion
of subadults returned to the Tampa Bay spawning site, exhibiting natal
homing. However, these first-time spawners arrived later than repeat
spawners and were detected over shorter time periods. This study, and
others like it, demonstrates how integrating data from individuals tracked
over space and time with more traditional population-based sampling is
changing our understanding of ecological processes that affect marine fish
productivity and our ability to manage for sustainablity. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.47bs5 |