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The multiple spawning pattern of weakfish in the Chesapeake Bay and Middle Atlantic Bight
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Citations
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References
1996
Year
Fishery AssessmentMultiple Spawning PatternEngineeringMarine SystemsOceanographyReproductive BiologyEmbryologyReproductive EndocrinologyFishery ManagementMiddle Atlantic BightFishery ScienceOocyte DevelopmentBiologyMacroscopic Gonad StagesEvolutionary BiologyChesapeake BayMarine EcologyAquatic OrganismMarine BiologyMedicineWeakfish Cynoscion Regalis
Weakfish Cynoscion regalis were collected from commercial fisheries in the Chesapeake Bay and the Middle Atlantic Bight (n=4380) during 1989–1992 and their reproductive biology assessed using the gonadosomatic index, macroscopic gonad stages, oocyte diameter distributions, microscopic whole oocyte analysis and histology. Sex ratios were approximately 3:1, females to males, in 1990–1992. Most fish (90%) attained sexual maturity by age 1 and at a small size. Estimated mean length at first maturity was: 164mm total length (TL) for males, and 170 mm TL for females. Weakfish spawn within the Chesapeake Bay, as far north as the Virginia/ Maryland border. Although spawning occurred during May–August and gonad development and initiation of spawning was synchronous, cessation of spawning was asynchronous. There was no indication that older fish exhibited a more extended spawning season than younger fish. Weakfish are multiple spawners with indeterminate fecundity. Oocyte development is asynchronous with oocytes of all stages being present in developed ovaries. Because of the complex and dynamic weakfish ovarian cycle, typical methods of assessing reproduction, such as the GSI and macroscopic gonad stages, are inadequate for this species if not used in conjunction with more detailed methods such as histology.
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