New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstracts
GROWTH AND MORTALITY OF TARAKIHI
(PISCES: CHEILODACTYLIDAE) IN LIGHTLY
EXPLOITED POPULATIONS
C. M. VOOREN*
Fisheries Research Division, Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries,
P.O. Box 19-062, Wellington, New Zealand
Abstract The lightly exploited populations of tarakihi Cheilodactylus macropterus off
the west coast of the South Island and off the Chatham Islands were sampled
for age and growth in 1971 and 1972. The lengths-at-capture showed similar
growth curves in both areas, a major feature being a rapid decline in annual
length increment after year 10 (mean length at that age is 38-39 cm). Both
populations contained a large proportion of fish older than 10 y. A rapid
decline in annual length increment after year 10 has not been observed in the
heavily fished tarakihi stock off East Cape and may be characteristic of lightly
exploited populations. The age composition of the Chatham Islands tarakihi
indicated that this stock has been subject to fluctuations in recruitment and that
M was of the order of 0.08. In the lightly fished stock off the west coast of the
South Island, Z was approximately 0.13 so F was there possibly of the order
of 0.05 (Z, F, and M are the instantaneous rates of total, fishing, and natural
mortality respectively).
N.Z. Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 11 (1) : 1Ñ22.
Received 20 May 1976; revision received 22 July 1976. Fisheries Research Division Publication 280.
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1008K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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