BOFFFFs: on the importance of conserving old-growth age structure in fishery populations
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa · California State University, Long Beach · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Abstract The value of big old fat fecund female fish (BOFFFFs) in fostering stock productivity and stability has long been underappreciated by conventional fisheries science and management, although Hjort (1914) indirectly alluded to the importance of maternal effects. Compared with smaller mature females, BOFFFFs in a broad variety of marine and freshwater teleosts produce far more and often larger eggs that may develop into larvae that grow faster and withstand starvation better. As (if not more) importantly, BOFFFFs in batch-spawning species tend to have earlier and longer spawning seasons and may spawn in different locations than smaller females. Such features indicate that BOFFFFs are major agents of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 16.39
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 236
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Spawn (biology)
- Fishing
- Stock (firearms)
- Fishery
- Biology
- Population
- Fisheries management
- Ecology
- Life below water