Fj. Neira et al., Biology and fishery of pilchard, Sardinops sagax (Clupeidae), within a large south-eastern Australian bay, MAR FRESH R, 50(1), 1999, pp. 43-55
Length-frequency and maturity data of pilchards (Sardinops sagax) are descr
ibed from monthly purse-seine commercial catch samples obtained in Port Phi
llip Bay (Victoria) between December 1994 and January 1997. These data, tog
ether with findings of a 12-month ichthyoplankton bay survey from September
1995 to August 1996, were used to determine the size at which pilchards re
cruit to the bay fishery and whether they spawn within this system. Monthly
pilchard catch rates between January 1990 and June 1996 are also described
and analysed in terms of environmental variables during that period. Resul
ts show that pilchards do not generally attain sexual maturity or spawn wit
hin the bay but use it as a nursery area, entering this system mostly as 0 to 1+ year-old juveniles (4-12 cm fork length, FL) in late spring-early su
mmer and returning to sea the following winter. This migration is supported
by the marked seasonality in catch rates, which each year peak in March-Ma
y and are lowest in August-October. The seasonality was adequately explaine
d by temperature lagged 2 months in a multivariate time-series model. Port
Phillip Bay appears to be the only semi-enclosed, shallow marine embayment
in temperate Australia that supports a substantial pilchard fishery that, i
n addition, is based predominantly on juveniles.