Early Life History and Recruitment in Fish Populations 1997
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-1439-1_2
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Effects of adult age and size structure on reproductive output in marine fishes

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Cited by 229 publications
(239 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
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“…Larger and older marbled sole females produced larger eggs. Similar relationships between maternal attributes and egg size, larval size, or larval quality have been reported for many fishes (e.g., Buckley et al, 1991a, b;Chambers and Leggett, 1992;Chambers and Waiwood, 1996;Kjesbu et al, 1996;Solemdal, 1997;Marteinsdottir and Steinarsson, 1998;Keckeis et al, 2000;Riveiro et al, 2000;Johnston and Leggett, 2002;Fox et al, 2003;Berkeley et al, 2004;Trippel and Neil, 2004;Green and McCormick, 2005). Although we found that larger larvae had higher feeding ability, direct correlations between feeding rate and maternal attributes were not significant.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Larger and older marbled sole females produced larger eggs. Similar relationships between maternal attributes and egg size, larval size, or larval quality have been reported for many fishes (e.g., Buckley et al, 1991a, b;Chambers and Leggett, 1992;Chambers and Waiwood, 1996;Kjesbu et al, 1996;Solemdal, 1997;Marteinsdottir and Steinarsson, 1998;Keckeis et al, 2000;Riveiro et al, 2000;Johnston and Leggett, 2002;Fox et al, 2003;Berkeley et al, 2004;Trippel and Neil, 2004;Green and McCormick, 2005). Although we found that larger larvae had higher feeding ability, direct correlations between feeding rate and maternal attributes were not significant.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…However, the maternal influence on the size and viability of marbled sole eggs and larvae is still unknown. Maternal effects are important because they are the only recruitment mechanism that can be directly managed via fishing regulations (Solemdal, 1997;Trippel et al, 1997).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, red snapper off Alabama are juvenescent and maturing at earlier ages than normal (Jackson et al 2007), and red snapper collected more recently by Nieland et al (2007) off Louisiana appear to be reaching smaller size-at-age. Juvenescence in fish population occurs when Z on adults is high, and fishers selectively remove larger, faster growing, late maturing individuals more rapidly because these fish are the first to become vulnerable to fishing (Trippel 1995;Trippel et al 1997;Murawski et al 2001). As such, per capita food resources increase for individuals that remain; some of these individuals respond by maturing at earlier ages.…”
Section: Fishing and Its Effect On Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whether this had a potential effect on development or viability could not be assessed, but results from further experiments under different salinity regimes during incubation suggested the effect to be non-significant (C. Petereit et al, unpublished data). Since eggs from only one female were used for each trial, the different survival rates might have reflected differences in egg quality due to maternal effects (Brooks et al 1997;Chambers 1997;Trippel et al 1997Trippel et al , 2005. Thompson et al (1981) performed experiments on sprat egg development from the English Channel using 19 different temperatures from 4.5 to 20°C and found successful development over all temperatures, although from 17.4 to 20°C hatching occurred prematurely before many eggs reached stage IV.…”
Section: Egg Phasementioning
confidence: 99%