Abstract
Bluemouth, Helicolenus dactylopterus is zygoparous species with internal fertilization spawning multiple batches of early-celled embryos in gelatinous masses. Its unusual reproductive strategy required methodological adjustments to estimate potential annual fecundity. The present study applied an adaptation of the gravimetric method, estimated batch fecundity based on different spawning fraction criteria (gestation, early-celled, and blastula females), and compared these estimates with the number of developing oocytes (NDOR) in the beginning of spawning to clarify the oocyte development pattern. Spawning fraction estimation based on the gestation criterion was considered the most reliable given its low variance and the subjectivity of staging early-celled embryos. On average, 87 batches were spawned with a mean spawning interval estimated at 1.73 days, and a mean relative annual total fecundity of 1,773 embryos g−1 carcass. The inexistence of a clear decreasing trend in the NDOR throughout the spawning season, and the lower NDOR estimates in females in the beginning of spawning comparing with relative annual fecundity (gestation criterion) suggests vitellogenic oocyte recruitment supporting previous results of indeterminate fecundity in Portuguese coast. The method proposed can be considered in fecundity studies of other commercial important species which extrudes gelatinous egg masses.
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