Pacific crevalle jack (Caranx caninus) is common throughout the tropical waters of the eastern Pacific Ocean (Eschmeyer et al. 1983, Nelson et al. 2004). It was believed that a single crevalle jack species (C. hippos) was circumglobal in its distribution, but SmithVaniz and Carpenter (2007) divided the species into three taxa, C. hippos (Atlantic, mainly western), C. caninus (eastern Pacific), and C. fischeri (eastern Atlantic). They described numerous meristic differences between the three species while maintaining them under the C. hippos complex. Throughout their tropical range, Pacific crevalle jack are often found in shallow inshore areas, including brackish waters (Eschmeyer et al. 1983). Along the eastern Pacific boundary, the northern range limit extends to San Diego Bay, California (Miller and Lea 1972; Eschmeyer et al. 1983; Love et al. 2005). The northern range limit for Pacific crevalle jack was established with the collection of an individual in south San Diego Bay in March 1972 (Miller and Lea 1972; SIO [Scripps Institution of Oceanography] 72–69) during a period of warmer than normal sea surface temperatures (Lea and Rosenblatt 2000). Lea and Rosenblatt (2000) report a total of four individuals collected from southern California, all within San Diego Bay, with the last individual collected on 21 January 1998 (SIO 98–119), during the one of the most intense El Nino events of the twentieth century. The remaining two individuals were collected in May 1975 (SIO 75–383) and September 1984 (SIO 84–251), both in San Diego Bay. El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events commonly transport more tropical species northwards along the Northeast Pacific Coast (Lea and Rosenblatt 2000), especially species known to aggregate around flotsam, such as jacks (Hunter and Mitchell 1966). While two carangid species (yellowtail jack [Seriola lalandi] and jack mackerel [Trachurus symmetricus]) are common to the Southern California Bight, Lea and Walker (1995) noted the record of 12 novel carangid species collected within southern California. Most of these occurrences were attributed to natural migrations associated with warmwater oceanographic events, although they did note the potential for anthropogenic introductions, especially of juveniles or adults carried north aboard sportfishing vessels, either as bait or alive within their holds. On 5 December 1982, M. D. Curtis collected one juvenile Pacific crevalle jack during an impingement survey at Huntington Beach Generating Station in Huntington Beach, California. Initially preserved in 10% formalin, the specimen was later transferred to 90% ethanol for archiving in the MBC Applied Environmental Sciences voucher collection. The individual measured 83 mm standard length, with a total length of 100 mm (Table 1). Morphometric analysis compared favorably to measurements in Miller and Lea (1972) with the current specimen exhibiting the following fin spine/ray counts: anal fin III, 18, pectoral fin I, 21, and dorsal fin VII, 21 (Table 2). Furthermore, a high arch in
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