Abstract

Growth rates of five species of New Zealand surf clams were estimated at Cloudy Bay, Marlborough, from analyses of sequential length-frequency samples with the computer program MULTIFAN and analyses of incremental growth of marked individuals with the computer program GROTAG. The von Bertalanffy parameters k and L∞ estimated by MULTIFAN were: Paphies donacina, 0.33 and 94.1; Spisula aequilatera, 1.01 and 60.3; Mactra murchisoni, 0.57 and 88; M. discors, 0.41 and 68; data for Dosinia anus could not be analysed reliably. These parameters estimated by GROTAG were: P. donacina, 0.35 and 84.8; S. aequilatera, 1.74 and 57.6; M. murchisoni, 0.58 and 80.6; M. discors, 0.54 and 61.5; D. anus, 0.36 and 61.6. The age-based growth estimated by MULTIFAN is not strictly comparable with the length-based growth estimated by GROTAG, but graphical comparisons show that both programs estimate similar growth rates for each species of surf clam. Interspecies differences in growth rates are hypothesized to be related to differences in species depth distribution within the surf zone. S. aequilatera, with the highest growth rate, is found just inshore of the primary wave break, where surf diatom abundance is postulated to be highest. An extension to the linear growth model of GROTAG that allows the predicted growth of larger animals to decline asymptotically to zero and never be negative is presented.

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