Spawning Stock–Recruitment Relationships of White Shrimp in the Southwestern Gulf of Mexico

  • Gracia A
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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.

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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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