Abstract

Juvenile Atlantic menhaden, Brevoortia tyrannus, were collected from estuarine waters of the Atlantic coast of the United States. Those collected north of latitude 40°N had lower numbers of total and trunk vertebrae, ventral scutes and interhaemal spines, and shallower heads, smaller eyes, shorter predorsal lengths, and lower frequencies of the fastest allele observed at the transferrin locus than those collected south of Long Island. Although the evidence is still inconclusive, the potential for at least two subpopulations still exists: one which spawns in the spring and early summer and is responsible for the primary recruitment in the northern North Atlantic area, and one which spawns in the autumn and winter and contributes the majority of recruitment in the middle and southern North Atlantic areas of the United States.

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