Abstract

Recruitment of juvenile fishes to five 25 m2 quadrats on an extensive natural reef in Kona, Hawaii was monitored over 51 months. Pronounced between-year variability in recruit abundance was evident for some species. Many exhibited strikingly low levels of recruitment. Overall recruitment was highly seasonal with a major peak in June and July, and a generally smaller, secondary peak in February and March. Recruitment was minimal during early winter (October–December) and a review of other studies similarly indicates minimal recruitment in Hawaii during this period. Spawning in Hawaiian fishes generally begins during the winter months of relatively low temperatures, increases during late winter and early summer and declines rapidly as maximum summer water temperatures are reached (September–October). Seasonal changes in food availability, ocean currents or salinity seem unlikely to be responsible for observed patterns of recruitment and spawning. Rather, the patterns appear to be most closely tied to changes in water temperature or photoperiod. Loss of propagules to offshore-moving eddies or other unfavorable currents may be responsible for the low levels of juvenile recruitment found in this and other Hawaiian studies. In Kona, at least 6 species of fishes recruited in pulses during quarter or new moon phases. Four other species have been reported elsewhere in Hawaii to recruit during either new or full moon phases. Lunar spawning periodicity was present in fewer than half of the species so far examined, and no single adaptive function for lunar periodicity was applicable to all species.

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