Abstract

We determined the age and growth of the dog snapper (Lutjanus jocu), caught in the region of Abrolhos Bank, Bahia State, by the fishermen from coastal communities of Prado, Alcobaça, Caravelas, and Nova Viçosa. We examined 205 sectioned otoliths of fish caught by harpoon, longline, hand line, and gill nets (14.5 to 79.5 cm fork length). The formation of each ring was considered annual. The sectioned otoliths showed between 0 and 29 rings. Nearly half of the analyzed specimens had between 0 and 7 rings (88 of 205). Fish caught with nets in the estuarine region were the juvenile, while fish caught with lines and harpoons were the oldest. Two von Bertalanffy growth models were fitted to length-at-age data: one assuming constant variance of length-at-age (SVB) and another assuming constant coefficient of variation, i.e. variance increasing as a function of average size (CVVB). The SVB estimates were Loo = 87.82 cm, K = 0.10, and t0 = -1.486 and the CVVB estimates were Loo = 117.60 cm, K = 0.06, and t0 = -2.470. The largest Loo values estimated by the CVVB model are supported by reports from the literature of larger animals occurring in the deeper outer shelf of Abrolhos Bank. Growth parameters were also estimated for males and females separately (SVB model) (Loo = 92.80 cm, K = 0.099, and t0 = -1.680 for males, and Loo = 82.10 cm, K = 0.105, and t0 = -1.570 for females).

Highlights

  • The dog snapper Lutjanus jocu (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) occurs in tropical waters of the Western Atlantic from Massachusetts (USA) to Northeastern Brazil (Allen, 1985) and was recently reported for the Mediterranean Sea (Vacchi et al, 2010)

  • Readings of whole otoliths were further dismissed, and we only present age estimates based on sectioned otoliths

  • Average percent error index was 11.7%, which corresponds to a CV of 16.0%, which is a value within the range of what is found in the literature reviewed by Campana (2001)

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Summary

Introduction

The dog snapper Lutjanus jocu (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) occurs in tropical waters of the Western Atlantic from Massachusetts (USA) to Northeastern Brazil (Allen, 1985) and was recently reported for the Mediterranean Sea (Vacchi et al, 2010). This species is very important in fisheries, like most species of the family Lutjanidae. In 2005, 0.6 % (293 tons) of the total catches in Bahia State was dog snappers (IBAMA, 2007). The dog snapper in Brazil, seems to be exploited to its maximum potential (Vasconcellos et al, 2007)

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