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Journal ArticleDOI

Spawning seasonality and body sizes at sexual maturity in the bluespine unicornfish, Naso unicornis (Acanthuridae)

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TLDR
Spawning seasonality and L50 estimates for bluespine unicornfish in Hawaii suggest that the species spawns several months earlier in the calendar year and matures at larger body lengths in Hawaii versus Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and Pohnpei in the Federated States of Micronesia.
Abstract
We herein evaluate several reproductive metrics of Hawaiian Archipelagic populations of the bluespine unicornfish (Naso unicornis), an economically and ecologically important, broadly distributed tropical Pacific reef fish, based on multi-year, fishery-dependent and fishery-independent collections. Sex-specific spawning seasonality was characterized for fish collected mostly from Oahu (Main Hawaiian Islands, MHI) using a gonadosomatic index. Histological slides preparations were used to score gonad developmental phase and to classify individuals of either sex as immature or mature. Sex-specific median body lengths at maturity (L50) were estimated by logistic fits of proportion mature versus length class. Spawning was highly seasonal in Hawaii, with a single brief (May–June) peak spawning period. Proportionate gonad-to-body weight values were relatively low, averaging only about 0.1 % and 0.6 % across all months of year and 0.16 % and 1.03 % during May–June for males and females, respectively. Median lengths at sexual maturity differed between the sexes. L50 values for fish collected throughout all months of year were 30.1 ± 0.5 (standard error) cm Fork Length (FL) for males and 35.5 ± 0.7 cm FL for females. Spawning seasonality and L50 estimates for bluespine unicornfish in Hawaii suggest that the species spawns several months earlier in the calendar year and matures at larger body lengths in Hawaii versus Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and Pohnpei in the Federated States of Micronesia. Estimated lengths at sexual maturity are compared to the minimum length (14 inches or 35.6 cm FL) mandated for this species in Hawaii: median size at maturity occurs at a length appreciably less than (males) or approximately equal to (females) minimum legal size. A likely disproportionately large contribution of old females to population replenishment is discussed relative to the minimum size limit.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Natural bounds on herbivorous coral reef fishes.

TL;DR: The substantial variability in herbivore populations explained by natural biophysical drivers highlights the need for locally appropriate management targets on coral reefs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Age‐based demographic and reproductive assessment of orangespine Naso lituratus and bluespine Naso unicornis unicornfishes

TL;DR: Results highlight the considerable spatial variation that may occur in the population biology of these species across various scales and proper management remains complicated without improved knowledge of fishery trends and reproductive behaviour in unicornfishes, species that are prime fishery targets in Micronesia and elsewhere.
Journal ArticleDOI

Age and growth of bluespine unicornfish (Naso unicornis): a half-century life-span for a keystone browser, with a novel approach to bomb radiocarbon dating in the Hawaiian Islands

TL;DR: Bluespine unicornfish (Naso unicornis) from Hawaii were aged to >50 years using cross-sectioned sagittal otoliths and it was possible to describe length-at-age despite difficulties in counting otolith annuli beyond 30–40 years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Demographic plasticity facilitates ecological and economic resilience in a commercially important reef fish

TL;DR: Reconstructed growth histories and population models demonstrated that variable growth types within populations can yield this peculiar biphasic mortality schedule, where fast growers enjoy early reproductive outputs at the expense of greater mortality, and benefits for slow growers derive from extended reproductive outputs over a greater number of annual cycles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Linking the biology and ecology of key herbivorous unicornfish to fisheries management in the pacific

TL;DR: This comprehensive review confirms the pressing need for implementation of the aforementioned management practices to protect these species in regions where they are heavily targeted, and prevent the impairment of their critical ecological function and importance as a food and income source.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The importance in fishery management of leaving the big ones

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that older individuals of some fish species produce larvae that have substantially better survival potential than do larvae from younger fishes, augmenting established knowledge that larger individuals usually have exponentially greater fecundity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Limited Functional Redundancy in a High Diversity System: Single Species Dominates Key Ecological Process on Coral Reefs

TL;DR: Sargassum assays and remote video cameras were used to directly quantify the species responsible for removing macroalgae across a range of coral reef habitats on Lizard Island, northern Great Barrier Reef, and revealed that a single species, Naso unicornis, was almost solely responsible for the removal of SargASSum biomass across all habitats.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth and longevity in acanthurid fishes; an analysis of otolith increments

Choat Jh, +1 more
TL;DR: Acanthurid fishes from eastern Australia appear to have consistent patterns of growth and longevity despite marked differences in asymptotic size, diet and mode of life.
Book ChapterDOI

CHAPTER 3 – Age-Based Studies

TL;DR: An emerging picture of the demography of reef fishes suggests three things: many taxa will be relatively long-lived, with life-spans exceeding 15 years; they will have highly distinctive patterns of growth, and age-based demographic features will show a strong phylogenetic structure.
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