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Population structure and dynamics of the Atlantic mackerel (Scomber scombrus) in the North Atlantic inferred from otolith chemical and shape signatures
Moura, A.; Muniz, A.A.; Mullis, E.; Wilson, J.M.; Vieira, R.P.; Almeida, A.A.; Pinto, E.; Brummer, G.-J.A.; van Gaever, P.; Gonçalves, J.M.S.; Correia, A.T. (2020). Population structure and dynamics of the Atlantic mackerel (Scomber scombrus) in the North Atlantic inferred from otolith chemical and shape signatures. Fish. Res. 230: 105621. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fishres.2020.105621
In: Fisheries Research. Elsevier: Amsterdam. ISSN 0165-7836; e-ISSN 1872-6763, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 
    NIOZ: NIOZ files 350715

Keyword
    Scombridae Rafinesque, 1815 [WoRMS]
Author keywords
    Fisheries; Scombridae; Natural tags; Sagittae; Stock delineation

Authors  Top 
  • Moura, A.
  • Muniz, A.A.
  • Mullis, E.
  • Wilson, J.M.
  • Vieira, R.P.
  • Almeida, A.A.
  • Pinto, E.
  • Brummer, G.-J.A., more
  • van Gaever, P., more
  • Gonçalves, J.M.S.
  • Correia, A.T.

Abstract
    The Atlantic mackerel, Scomber scombrus, is an economically important and widely distributed fish species in the North Atlantic, currently considered to comprise two stocks: the North-West Atlantic (NWA) and the North-East Atlantic (NEA). Each stock is composed of different spawning components which involve temporal and spatial movements driven by the environment. Thus, resolving the species population structure and dynamics presents a challenge to scientists. In this study, the stock structure of S. scombrus was evaluated using otolith shape and chemical signatures. One hundred and eighty individuals of the same cohort (age 3), caught between January and February of 2018 from six key locations in the North Atlantic, were used. Individuals were collected from the two spawning components in the NWA stock, the Canadian Northern component (NWA-N) and the US Southern component (NWA-S); and from the three spawning components in the NEA stock, the North Sea (NEA-NS), the Western (NEA-W) and the Southern components (NEA-S), plus, an overlapping area of these last two components, the Bay of Biscay (NEA-BB). Combined otolith signatures fully discriminated the NEA and NWA stocks (100% of reclassification success, indicates distinct population-units) and discriminated the components within each stock with high reclassification percentages (100% and 68% for the overall reclassification of the NWA and NEA components, respectively). These data suggest that NWA stock should be regard as two distinct population-units for fisheries management purposes, confirms the complex metapopulational structure of the NEA stock, and calls for the need of continuous evaluation of these complex stocks in order to achieve a sustainable exploitation.

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