Abstract
The annual spawner-recruit relationship for white shrimp Penaeus setiferus in the southwestern Gulf of Mexico did not show a significant correlation (0.10 ] P ] 0.05) from 1973 to 1984.1 attribute this to the effect of environmental factors as well as to the interannual variability of recruitment strength in the main cohorts throughout each year. A Ricker stock-recruitment relationship was established for dominant cohorts in the 1973-1984 study period. The variance explained by the model increased from 70 to 82% (multiple correlation r = 0.903, P [ 0.001) when river discharges during the spawning month and before recruitment were included. I propose that the magnitude of recruitment largely depends on the carrying capacity of critical nursery habitats. Fishing effort is related to recruit abundance and has a direct effect in determining spawner stock size (multiple correlation r = 0.91, P [ 0.001). Through multiple-regression techniques, a surface was defined where the recruitment level varied according to spawning stock size as well as to river discharge. © By the American Fisheries Society 1991.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Gracia, A. (1991). Spawning Stock–Recruitment Relationships of White Shrimp in the Southwestern Gulf of Mexico. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 120(4), 519–527. https://doi.org/10.1577/1548-8659(1991)120<0519:ssrows>2.3.co;2
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