Abstract

Postlarval and juvenile Penaeus merguiensis de Man from the Embley River estuary on the north-eastern Gulf of Carpentaria were sampled every 2 wk from September 1986 until August 1989, using a small beam trawl. Settlement of planktonic postlarvae peaked during the pre-wet season (October to December), and declined through the wet season (January to March). Using length-frequency analysis between 12 and 14 cohorts of juvenile prawns were identified each year. Length-frequency analysis and modal progression were used to derive growth rates during the estuarine phase of the life cycle. Growth rates, which could be described by a linear model, ranged from 0.63 to 1.65 mm CL (carapace length) wk-1. Growth rates were positively influenced by water temperature and negatively influenced by prawn density. Salinity had no effect on growth rates. Prawns spent between 6 and 20 wk in the Embley River before emigrating offshore from the estuary. Weekly instantaneous rates of natural mortality (M) ranged from 0.23 to 0.94, and in general were lowest during the dry season (July to September) and highest during the pre-wet and wet seasons. Only temperature significantly influenced mortality rates, with mortality rates increasing with temperature. By projecting juvenile growth rates forward through time, we established which cohorts contributed to the offshore fishery each year. In 1987 and 1988 the April fishery consisted of prawns which had settled in the river before the end of January each year. Slow growth rates during the pre-wet season of 1988 meant that only cohorts that were settled before early December 1988 contributed to the fishery in April 1989. Whether a cohort contributes to the fishery depends on the settlement date, water temperature and prawn density.

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