Preliminary life history of the Critically Endangered bottlenose wedgefish Rhynchobatus australiae from Southeast Asia

D'Alberto, Brooke M., Clark-Shen, Naomi Catherine, Tingting, Kathy Xu, Green, Madeline E., Hutchinson, Neil, Chin, Andrew, and Simpfendorfer, Colin A. (2024) Preliminary life history of the Critically Endangered bottlenose wedgefish Rhynchobatus australiae from Southeast Asia. Endangered Species Research, 53. pp. 363-378.

[img]
Preview
PDF (Published Version) - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (2MB) | Preview
View at Publisher Website: https://doi.org/10.3354/ESR01294
 
3


Abstract

The bottlenose wedgefish Rhynchobatus australiae has experienced substantial population declines throughout its range. However, there is a lack of life history information (age, growth, and maturity) available for this species to inform conservation and management efforts. A total of 48 R. australiae samples were purchased from 2 fishing ports in Singapore between July 2018–July 2019. Species identification was confirmed by mtDNA barcoding using the NADH2 region. Length of specimens ranged from 506–1645 mm total length (TL), and ages ranged from 0–11 yr. Multi-model analysis was used to estimate growth parameters using a Bayesian approach with informative priors. The von Bertalanffy model was the best fitting growth model for the combined sexes (L∞ = 2814 mm TL; L0 = 517 mm TL; k = 0.07 yr–1), for females only (L∞ = 3053 mm TL; L0 = 504 mm TL; k = 0.06 yr–1), and for males only (L∞ = 2741 mm TL; L0 = 497 mm TL; k = 0.07 yr–1). Preliminary results indicate that females and males may mature at different ages and lengths, with females (A50 = 3.25 yr; L50 = 1014 mm TL) matured younger and at smaller sizes, than males (A50 = 5.03 yr; L50 = 1197 mm TL). R. australiae has an estimated theoretical longevity of 40 and 47 yr for males and females, respectively. This study provides the first preliminary species-specific life history information for R. australiae, suggesting that this species in Southeast Asian waters is slowgrowing. This information will further the biological knowledge available for this species and can be used to help design effective management and conservation measures.

Item ID: 83564
Item Type: Article (Research - C1)
ISSN: 1613-4796
Keywords: Age and growth, Bayesian analysis, Maturity, Multi-model inference method, Reproduction
Related URLs:
Copyright Information: © The authors 2024. Open Access under Creative Commons by Attribution Licence. Use, distribution and reproduction are unrestricted. Authors and original publication must be credited.
Date Deposited: 05 Sep 2024 03:02
Downloads: Total: 3
Last 12 Months: 3
More Statistics

Actions (Repository Staff Only)

Item Control Page Item Control Page