Biology of the small pelagic fishes in the New Volta Lake in Ghana. Part III: Sex and reproduction |
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Authors: | Julian D. Reynolds |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver 8, B.C., Canada
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Abstract: | Reproductive patterns of five species, from three families, of small pelagic fishes in the new Volta Lake in Ghana showed several similar features. These included sex size defferences, males maturing and reaching final sizes smaller than females; heterogenous sex ratios in four species, being most markedly unequal usually at peak breeding times; demersal eggs; and extended fractional spawning patterns. The clupeids Pellonula and Cynothrissa and the cyprinid Barilius all breed in the dry season, whereas the schilbeids Physailia and Siluranodon are wet-season spawners. Only Pellonula and Physailia have extended their breeding season in the new lake to cover most of the year; the other species have not, although Siluranodon spawns into the early dry season. In the lake environment Pellonula's pelagic larva is no longer endangered by seasonal floods, whereas Physailia can use the lake's continuous “high waters” for extended breeding. Relaxation of breeding patterns and protracted fractional spawning has allowed best exploitation of the new regime. |
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