1991
DOI: 10.18785/negs.1201.04
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Life History and Ecology of Sand Seatrout Cynoscion arenarius Ginsburg, in the Northern Gulf of Mexico: A Review

Abstract: Sand seatrout usually represent from 5-7% of trawl catches by weight, 8-10% by number, and consistently rank among the top 5 most abundant species in demersal surveys. Sand seatrout mature at 140-180 mm TL, begin to enter the late developing, gravid, or ripe stages around 180 mm TL, and first spawn at 12 months. Spawning occurs primarily from March through September with distinct peaks in both March-April and August-September. Spawning initially takes place in midshelf to offshore waters and moves shoreward as… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…In the GOM, C. arenarius, the sand seatrout, is generally intermediate to C. nebulosus and C. nothus in terms of its size, feeding habits, and the habitats in which it occurs (Ginsburg 1931, Guest & Gunter 1958, Sutter & McIlwain 1987, Shipp 1986, Ditty et al 1991, Hoese & Moore 1998. Cynoscion regalis, the Atlantic weakfish, replaces C. arenarius along the Atlantic coast of the U.S.A.…”
Section: The Western Atlantic Cynoscion Assemblagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the GOM, C. arenarius, the sand seatrout, is generally intermediate to C. nebulosus and C. nothus in terms of its size, feeding habits, and the habitats in which it occurs (Ginsburg 1931, Guest & Gunter 1958, Sutter & McIlwain 1987, Shipp 1986, Ditty et al 1991, Hoese & Moore 1998. Cynoscion regalis, the Atlantic weakfish, replaces C. arenarius along the Atlantic coast of the U.S.A.…”
Section: The Western Atlantic Cynoscion Assemblagementioning
confidence: 99%