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Effects of autotomy on long-term survival and growth of painted spiny lobster (Panulirus versicolor) on the Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Authors:Ashley J. Frisch  Jean-Paul A. Hobbs
Affiliation:1. ARC Center of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, 4811, Australia
Abstract:The effects of autotomy (shedding of appendages) on survival and growth rates of painted spiny lobster were investigated at Northwest Island (23° 18?? S, 152° 43?? E) during the period 2003?C2006. Adult lobsters were captured, tagged, and classified as either uninjured (n?=?68), minimally injured (n?=?39) or moderately injured (n?=?19) depending on the number and type of appendages that were autotomized during capture and handling. Six to thirty-six months after release, 86 lobsters were recaptured (mean time at large?=?305?days). Recapture rates of uninjured (64.7%), minimally injured (71.8%), and moderately injured lobsters (73.7%) were not significantly different. Similarly, mean annualized growth rates of uninjured, minimally injured, and moderately injured lobsters were not significantly different. This suggests that the energetic cost of a single episode of autotomy is either negligible or exists as a trade-off with some other life history trait, such as reduced reproductive performance. These results support the use of certain management tools (e.g., size limits) that prescribe release of non-legal lobsters, regardless of their injury status.
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