Abstract
Over 2000 individuals of Lolliguncula brevis were collected from 1975 to 1979 in the northern Gulf of Mexico off the Texas coast; their growth and reproductive biology were analyzed by traditional fisheries methods (ELEFAN analysis of the length-frequency data). From 1994 to 1996, 112 squid were captured in Galveston Bay, near Galveston Island, Texas, and their age and growth determined by statolith increment analysis. The results were strikingly different between the two approaches. Length-frequency analysis of growth overestimated life span by a factor of three to seven times. Statolith increment counts, verified by laboratory growth validation experiments, indicate that this species is very short-lived, in the order of 100-200 days depending on temperature. A slight increase in temperature during the early stage of development can greatly shorten the life span. This study provides evidence that increased temperature during a squid's early growth period could markedly accelerate growth. Mature individuals occurred throughout the year, although there were many more mature males collected than females. Gonad growth and maturation in L. brevis appear to be associated more with size than with individual age. There is now compelling evidence that length-frequency analysis should be abandoned as a technique for determining squid growth.
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More From: Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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