Abstract

The development of dusk and dawn migratory behaviours was investigated in French and white grunts ( Haemulon flavolineatum and H. plumieri) at St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands. Four juvenile stages were recognized: small, medium, transitional, and large. Each stage differed in age, size, coloration, habitat preference, diel foraging patterns, and twilight migratory behaviour. Comparisons between medium (15 to 30 mm long, 30 to 50 days old) and large juveniles (40 to 120 mm, 80 to 700 days) were emphasized. Medium juveniles occurred in small, diurnally feeding groups near sea urchins in the sand halo around a reef. Group composition varied during the day. They migrated at 15 min after sunset, moving hesitantly from halo to grassbed. Migration routes remained constant over a month, but differed over two years. Large juveniles fed nocturnally, formed daytime resting schools over coral heads, and migrated at 25 min after sunset. Compared with medium fish, resting site constancy was greater during a day, migration activities were significantly less variable, and migration routes remained relatively constant for two years. Ontogenetic differences in constancy of daytime school locales and migration routes may result from learning, facilitated perhaps by greater overlap of age cohorts in large juveniles. Other differences in behavioural variability may result from ontogenetic development of the visual apparatus, plus stabilizing selection due to greater predation on smaller, behaviourally variable fish.

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