Abstract

Understanding drivers of fish maturity are essential to predict the productivity, stability, and resiliency of exploited populations. In terms of horse mackerel (Trachurus trachurus), in the eastern Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea, size at maturity estimates date back to the 1940s and throughout its range. However, many older estimates may not reflect current maturity rates. This is because past methods were imprecise, or environmental or fishing effects may change maturity rates, and some stock areas have been overlooked. To address this data gap for the Central Mediterranean Sea, female horse mackerel size at maturity was estimated for two areas: the Strait of Sicily and the Tyrrhenian Sea. All ovaries were assigned a reproductive phase based on macroscopic methods, and the reliability of this method (94%) was validated with a microscopic method (i.e., gonad histology). Although the collected females exhibited similar condition, in terms of total body weight at a given length, as well as similar gonad-somatic indices, the size at median maturity in the Strait of Sicily was smaller (161 mm total length [TL]) than in the Tyrrhenian Sea (176 mm TL). Future sampling in a series of years with contrasting levels of productivity may help identify whether this is a broad latitudinal trend, or due to specific oceanographic drivers, such as estuarine outflow into the Tyrrhenian Sea or upwelling in the Strait of Sicily. Meanwhile, resource assessments should consider that these two areas represent two phenotypic stocks.

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