Abstract
Responsible stock enhancement initiatives require baseline data of wild population demographic conditions that can be used in testing management outcomes. This study provides the first fishery-independent assessment of length- and age-based biological characteristics of exploited populations of Platycephalus fuscus in eastern Australia prior to stock enhancement. Sampling was conducted over seven estuaries spanning seven degrees of latitude and the geographical range of proposed stock enhancements. Populations in all estuaries showed evidence of length and age truncation, especially those subject to commercial fisheries where young individuals of both sexes dominated populations. Maximum longevities were 12 and 11 years for females and males respectively, but few females >5 years and males >3 years were generally sampled. Females dominated populations, and on average, the mean lengths and ages of females were greater than males within each estuary and across all age classes. Sexually dimorphic variation in growth was evident across all estuaries, with females attaining greater maximum lengths than males. Estuary-specific differences in individual growth were not identified. On average, over 50% of females sampled in each estuary were > the minimum legal length (MLL), but the opposite was evident for males. In contrast, over 25% of males in each estuary were > the mean length at maturity (L50), whereas in all but one estuary <13% of the females were > the L50. Stocked male and female P. fuscus should recruit to the fishery in 2 and 3 years, and contribute to the spawning stock in 1.5 and 4.5 years, respectively. This study provides important historical baseline data that can contribute to testing stock enhancement outcomes on populations.
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