We examine the variation in egg sizes of marine teleosts and evaluate
the maternal contribution to this variability. At the species level, e
gg sizes in 309 North Atlantic fishes range from 0.3 to 18.0 mm diamet
er (median = 1.1), size at hatching varies directly with egg size, and
large adult size is associated with large eggs but the relationship i
s weak. Within populations, egg sizes are distributed normally with a
median coefficient of variation of 4% (n = 56 species). Egg size varie
d among females in all cases for which female-level data were found. E
stimates of the variance components of egg size due to females were fo
und for three species and, as a percentage of total variance, are 71%
for capelin, Mallotus villosus, 46% for winter flounder, Pleuronectes
americanus, and 35% for Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua. For cod, which spa
wn multiple egg batches per year, an additional batches-within-females
component was estimated to be 26%. Size at hatching also differs amon
g sibgroups and is generally directly related to egg size at the indiv
idual level. We modelled fish growth by allowing individuals to grow a
t exponential rates from a normal distribution of initial sizes. Compa
ring size variation in model fish to empirical evidence suggests that
variation in initial sizes, propagated by growth, could account for a
large fraction of the size variation observed months after hatching in
natural populations. We view size variation in young marine fishes to
be largely of maternal origin and environmentally modulated, which if
true has special consequences for fisheries and aquaculture.