Abstract

In this study, we examined the life history characteristics of the parrotfish Calotomus japonicus, using individuals collected between May 2003 and May 2008 off the Nagasaki Peninsula in northwest Kyushu, Japan. Age determinations were performed using scales. Marginal increment analysis revealed that growth rings were formed annually around July. Growth in both sexes was fitted to the von Bertalanffy growth function (L∞ = 513, k = 0.28, t0 = 0.03, where L∞ is the theoretical asymptotic total length in mm, k is the growth rate coefficient and t0 is the theoretical time at zero length). Observed maximum age for both sexes was 8 years. We also characterized the reproductive biology of this species based on a gonadosomatic index and histological examinations of the gonads. The spawning season extends from July to October, with peak spawning activity occurring during July and August. Fish reach sexual maturity by the second year of life. Females are assumed to be multiple spawners, since we observed specimens with postovulatory follicles in ovaries containing either yolk globule oocytes or migratory nucleus oocytes. All males had secondary testes, which were characterized by the presence of an ovarian lumen structure and sperm sinuses in the gonadal wall. This indicates that all males, irrespective of whether they were initial or terminal phase males, had undergone a sexual transition. Sex change appears to occur during the spawning season, and thereafter sex-changed males are able to fertilize female eggs throughout the remainder of the current spawning season.

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