Abstract

ABSTRACT Trade-offs among life-history traits (e.g. growth, reproduction, and survival) are fundamental to the population success of living beings in the wild. This study describes the life-history traits of the sergeant major, Abudefduf saxatilis, one of those fishes most abundant in the coral reefs of the Caribbean Sea. The reproductive biology, age, growth, and abundance of a particular population of A. saxatilis from Mexico was explored using 12 monthly samplings to collect 414 specimens, and abundance monitoring through visual censuses for age-based demographic analysis. Our results indicated that A. saxatilis would have an opportunistic strategy with a type II survivorship curve since the studied population was characterized by fast growth, maturation at intermediate sizes (≈11 cm L T or 2.5 yrs. old), with batch spawning and indeterminate fecundity, protracted spawning season (January to September), high abundance of recruits, low instantaneous natural mortality (M = 0.114 year −1), high life expectancy at birth (e 0 ≈ 4.7 yrs.) and maturity (e α ≈ 2.8 yrs.), and high annual survival of adults and high survival to maturity (). All these life-history traits facilitate the population success of A. saxatilis, showing a high reproductive effort and a rapid population turnover, making this species an efficient colonizer.

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