Growth, sexual maturation and spawning in central North Sea plaice (Pleuronectes platessa L.), and the generation of maturity ogives from commercial catch data
Pj. Bromley, Growth, sexual maturation and spawning in central North Sea plaice (Pleuronectes platessa L.), and the generation of maturity ogives from commercial catch data, J SEA RES, 44(1-2), 2000, pp. 27-43
This paper investigates sexual maturation in North Sea plaice using data fr
om the commercial catch of plaice landed on Lowestoft fish market from 1983
-1996, along with data from the English summer groundfish surveys from 1977
-1993. Two offshore spawning areas were identified in the central North Sea
-central-northern and central-southern. A general linear model (GLM) showed
plaice sexual maturation was influenced by body weight, age and geographic
al location and was subject to annual and seasonal variation. Few three yea
r old female place appeared to spawn in the central North Sea. similar to t
he situation early in the 20th century. The condition factor of plaice peak
ed at the start of spawning and declined sharply during spawning, with olde
r females investing the most heavily in reproduction, both in absolute and
relative terms. The loss of older females through fishing is, therefore, li
kely to compromise the overall reproductive fitness of the remaining popula
tion, comprising of young females. The reproductive fitness of the males wa
s also compromised, since young males tended to be in running condition for
about a month less than older males. Reproductive investment in females wa
s about twice the level found in males. There was evidence that plaice in t
he northern North Sea matured at a slower rate than fish in the south. From
the mid-1980s until the mid-1990s there was an increase in the proportion
of young plaice reaching sexual maturity, following an earlier decline from
the late 1970s. Problems with using maturity ogives derived from market sa
mpling data in order to assess the proportion of spawning plaice in the Nor
th Sea are discussed. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.