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Sardine (Sardina pilchardus) spawning seasonality in European waters of the northeast Atlantic
Authors:Yorgos Stratoudakis  Stephen Coombs  Ana Lago de Lanzós  Nicholas Halliday  Gersom Costas  Bruno Caneco  Concha Franco  David Conway  M Begoña Santos  Alexandra Silva  Miguel Bernal
Institution:(1) INRB/IPIMAR, Avenida de Brasilia s/n, 1449-006 Lisbon, Portugal;(2) Marine Biological Association, The Laboratory, Citadel Hill, PL1 2PB Plymouth, UK;(3) IEO, Servicios Centrales, Corazón de Maria 8, 28002 Madrid, Spain;(4) IEO, Centro Costero de Vigo, Cabo Estai, Canido, 36200 Vigo, Spain;(5) IEO, Centro Costero de Cádiz, Centro Andaluz de Ciencia y Tecnología Marina, Poligono del Río San Pedro s/n, 11519 Puerto Real, Cádiz, Spain
Abstract:Egg data from ichthyoplankton monitoring sites in the western English Channel (1988–2003) and northern Spain (1990–2000) and macroscopic maturity data from biological samples of purse seine landings in western and southern Iberia (1980–2004) are used to describe the spawning seasonality of sardine (Sardina pilchardus) in European waters of the northeast Atlantic using generalised additive models. The fitted models reveal a double peak in spawning activity during early summer and autumn in the western Channel, a wider spring peak off northern Spain and a broad winter season in the western and southern Iberian Peninsula. At all sites, a high probability of spawning activity was observed over at least 3 months of the year, with the duration of the season increasing with both decreasing latitude and increasing fish size. Off western and southern Iberia there are indications that the spawning season has been of longer duration in recent years for all size classes (reaching in some cases 8 months of the year for large fish). These patterns are in general agreement with existing literature and theoretical expectations of sardine spawning being driven locally by the seasonal cycle of water temperature, assuming preferences for spawning at 14 –15°C and avoidance for temperatures below 12°C and above 16°C. Regional quotient plots indicated that spawning tolerance to higher temperatures increases progressively with decreasing latitude. Despite the weak evidence for geographical differences in temperature tolerance that may have some genetic origin, the degree of spatio-temporal overlap in sardine-spawning activity within Atlantic European waters is unlikely to promote any reproductive isolation in that area.
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