The examination of the sexual ratio of D. eleginoides between the first week of March and the third week of July 1996, in the subarea 48.3 shows that the sex ratio departs from the expected 1:l ratio being the females more abundant in the longline samples, except during May, when the males at size of first maturity join the female population. After the first week of June, the sex ratio turns back to a higher number of females. Because the longline remains most of the time close to the bottom habitats, this finding suggests that: or the females remain in higher proportion in the habitat sampled by the longline because the males move to other habitats or, the females are more vulnerable to the longline fishing techniques, or both sexes rise in the water column for spawn. No one of these hypotheses could be tested using the fishery data.
There is no abstract available for this document.
There is no abstract available for this document.
There is no abstract available for this document.
There is no abstract available for this document.
Abstract:
This note describes a successful method for tagging Dissostichus eleginoides and presents an analysis of a tag-recapture experiment carried during the Macquarie Island fishery for this species during the 1995-96 season. Simple population and tag accumulation models are used to account for the tags being released at various times throughout the season, and the effects of the removals by fishing. By assuming that recaptures have a Poisson distribution, maximum likelihood estimates are obtained for the pre-fishing abundance of the population in the season of 996 000 fish. However, this is adjusted to 901 000 fish if a small number of recovered but unreported tags are taken into account.