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Mating system and spawning cycle in the blenny,Istiblennius enosimae,at Kagoshima,Japan
Authors:Tomoki Sunobe  Takanobu Ohta  Akinobu Nakazono
Institution:(1) Fisheries Laboratory, Faculty of Agriculture, Kyushu University, Hakozaki, Fukuoka, 812, Japan;(2) Present address: Natural History Museum and Institute, Chiba, Aoba-cho, Chiba, 260, Japan
Abstract:Synopsis Field observations on reproductive ecology and territoriality of the blennyIstiblennius enosimae, were made in a tidepool at Hanaze Beach, Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan during the summer of 1988. This blenny was herbivorous, and nesting males (> 73 mm SL) maintained territories around nest sites, which were located in rocky crevices of the tidepool. Males courted females wandering near their nests, and spawnings coincided with neap tides. Males guarded the eggs until the embryos hatched at following spring tides. It was suggested that this semilunar spawning cycle guarantees a maximum dispersal of newly hatched embryos away from natal tidepool. Male reproductive success was related to large body size and/or large nest size. There is a size-assortative relationship between male and female among pairs. Egg predation rates by fishes, crabs and sea urchins were not correlated with the body size of male blennies.
Keywords:Semilunar spawning cycle  Reproductive success  Mate choice  Blenniidae  Fish
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