2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2005.02.026
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Reproduction and growth of the painted comber Serranus scriba (Serranidae) of the Marine Reserve of Lanzarote Island (Central-Eastern Atlantic)

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Cited by 34 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…The ovotestis structure of S. atricauda follows the type of organization that is typical of Serranidae family and which is also found in other species of Serranus inhabiting the Eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean: S. cabrilla (García-Díaz et al 1997); S. scriba (Tuset et al 2005;Alonso-Fernández et al 2011) and S. hepatus (Bruslé 1983). The similarities found in these four species were highlighted by Erisman and Hastings (2011) where these species form a group within the Serranus clade in the phylogenetic hypothesis tree obtained in their reproductive evolution study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%
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“…The ovotestis structure of S. atricauda follows the type of organization that is typical of Serranidae family and which is also found in other species of Serranus inhabiting the Eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean: S. cabrilla (García-Díaz et al 1997); S. scriba (Tuset et al 2005;Alonso-Fernández et al 2011) and S. hepatus (Bruslé 1983). The similarities found in these four species were highlighted by Erisman and Hastings (2011) where these species form a group within the Serranus clade in the phylogenetic hypothesis tree obtained in their reproductive evolution study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…This was probably due to the fact that the target species in the Portuguese fishery is not the blacktail comber, but the Atlantic wreckfish (Polyprion americanus) and large hooks are used in the longline fishery. Therefore, small individuals which live in shallower waters (Tuset et al 2004) and feed mainly on benthic species (Morato et al 2000) are not caught. The absence of these small individuals made it impossible to estimate other reproductive parameters like the maturity ogive and length at 50 % maturity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is considered a by-catch or low-value species by the commercial fishery, but it is highly targeted and appreciated by the recreational fishery (Morales-Nin et al 2005. S. scriba is a simultaneous hermaphrodite, with asynchronous oocyte development and a batch spawning pattern (Tuset et al 2005, Zorica et al 2005, AlonsoFernández et al 2011. Sexual maturity is achieved during the first or second year (Alos et al 2010), and the spawning season extends from May to August, with a peak of spawning activity between May and June in the western Mediterranean (Alonso-Fernández et al 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In many cases, this is a response to different growth rates, where the larger otoliths (morphotype I) grow faster than smaller ones (morphotype II). Furthermore, one can deduce that slow-growing individuals have larger and heavier otoliths than fast-growing ones of the same length (Secor & Dean, 1989;Reznick et al, 1989;Worthington et al, 1995;Tuset et al, 2004), since faster growth produced long thin crystals compared with shorter more compacted ones in slower-growing fish (Gauldie & Nelson, 1990). The differentiation of two otolith morphs between wildfarmed and wild fish in salema is clear evidence of the intake of aquafeeds.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%