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Dedicated dads: a study on the nesting behaviour of Spondyliosoma emarginatum (Telostei: Sparidae)

Fish display the most diverse parental care behaviours within the animal kingdom. These behaviours are important from evolutionary and conservation perspectives as parental care is critical for the development and survival of the young. This study used video monitoring to uncover the nesting behavio...

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Main Author: Faure, Beaulieu Nina
Other Authors: Attwood, Colin G
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Faure, Beaulieu Nina
author2 Attwood, Colin G
author_browse Attwood, Colin G
Faure, Beaulieu Nina
author_facet Attwood, Colin G
Faure, Beaulieu Nina
author_sort Faure, Beaulieu Nina
collection Thesis
description Fish display the most diverse parental care behaviours within the animal kingdom. These behaviours are important from evolutionary and conservation perspectives as parental care is critical for the development and survival of the young. This study used video monitoring to uncover the nesting behaviour of an endemic southern African species of the Sparidae family, Spondyliosoma emarginatum (steentjie). S. emarginatum has evolved a nesting strategy by which males create nests on the seafloor for females to lay their eggs in. The eggs are fertilised and guarded by the male until they hatch. This species is particularly interesting as it has evolved a life-history strategy unique to the Sparidae, a combination of protogyny (female to male sex change) and male parental care. A compound nesting site with over 50 nests was discovered in 9 to 14 m depth in False Bay, South Africa. A large diversity in nest size and habitat was uncovered. The first nest with eggs appeared on the 3rd of September and this number gradually increased to a maximum of 26 nests on the 3rd of October. Eggs took from seven to nine days to hatch. During nesting, males were affected by stochastic weather events in the form of south-easterly gales. Nesting sites are likely limited to sheltered bays along South Africa's mostly exposed coast, and the optimal depth is probably a tradeoff between storm exposure and temperature. Deeper nests are expected in the east where the water is warmer. Nests were filmed daily to reveal how male behaviour changes before egg deposition and during egg development. After egg deposition, males increased their time on the nest from 30 to 52 minutes per hour. Nest defence included the regular clearing of invertebrate invaders (brittle stars, hermit crabs, sea cucumbers, and sea stars), and chasing away other fish species (sand gobies, Roman, and hottentot) and neighbouring male steentjies. Energy intensive behaviours such as clearing the nest and fanning the eggs remained constant irrespective of egg presence. In addition, males do not feed when guarding eggs, which explains the drop in male condition during spring. The revelation of this nesting site is useful for conservation and fishery management as the nests and nesting males are vulnerable to both fishing and seabed disturbances. Spondyliosoma spp. fulfil the requirements of the size-advantage model of protogyny. Their short life-span, in particular, their even shorter egg-laying life-span, classifies this species as an opportunist. This strategy may explain its success and numerical dominance in a wide range of biogeographic zones. The nesting behaviours shares much in common with freshwater opportunistic fish species and set it apart from the bulk of the Sparidae.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:48.735Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/33661 Dedicated dads: a study on the nesting behaviour of Spondyliosoma emarginatum (Telostei: Sparidae) Faure, Beaulieu Nina Attwood, Colin G biological sciences Fish display the most diverse parental care behaviours within the animal kingdom. These behaviours are important from evolutionary and conservation perspectives as parental care is critical for the development and survival of the young. This study used video monitoring to uncover the nesting behaviour of an endemic southern African species of the Sparidae family, Spondyliosoma emarginatum (steentjie). S. emarginatum has evolved a nesting strategy by which males create nests on the seafloor for females to lay their eggs in. The eggs are fertilised and guarded by the male until they hatch. This species is particularly interesting as it has evolved a life-history strategy unique to the Sparidae, a combination of protogyny (female to male sex change) and male parental care. A compound nesting site with over 50 nests was discovered in 9 to 14 m depth in False Bay, South Africa. A large diversity in nest size and habitat was uncovered. The first nest with eggs appeared on the 3rd of September and this number gradually increased to a maximum of 26 nests on the 3rd of October. Eggs took from seven to nine days to hatch. During nesting, males were affected by stochastic weather events in the form of south-easterly gales. Nesting sites are likely limited to sheltered bays along South Africa's mostly exposed coast, and the optimal depth is probably a tradeoff between storm exposure and temperature. Deeper nests are expected in the east where the water is warmer. Nests were filmed daily to reveal how male behaviour changes before egg deposition and during egg development. After egg deposition, males increased their time on the nest from 30 to 52 minutes per hour. Nest defence included the regular clearing of invertebrate invaders (brittle stars, hermit crabs, sea cucumbers, and sea stars), and chasing away other fish species (sand gobies, Roman, and hottentot) and neighbouring male steentjies. Energy intensive behaviours such as clearing the nest and fanning the eggs remained constant irrespective of egg presence. In addition, males do not feed when guarding eggs, which explains the drop in male condition during spring. The revelation of this nesting site is useful for conservation and fishery management as the nests and nesting males are vulnerable to both fishing and seabed disturbances. Spondyliosoma spp. fulfil the requirements of the size-advantage model of protogyny. Their short life-span, in particular, their even shorter egg-laying life-span, classifies this species as an opportunist. This strategy may explain its success and numerical dominance in a wide range of biogeographic zones. The nesting behaviours shares much in common with freshwater opportunistic fish species and set it apart from the bulk of the Sparidae. 2021-07-29T13:11:08Z 2021-07-29T13:11:08Z 2021 2021-07-29T12:41:20Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33661 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science
spellingShingle biological sciences
Faure, Beaulieu Nina
Dedicated dads: a study on the nesting behaviour of Spondyliosoma emarginatum (Telostei: Sparidae)
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Dedicated dads: a study on the nesting behaviour of Spondyliosoma emarginatum (Telostei: Sparidae)
title_full Dedicated dads: a study on the nesting behaviour of Spondyliosoma emarginatum (Telostei: Sparidae)
title_fullStr Dedicated dads: a study on the nesting behaviour of Spondyliosoma emarginatum (Telostei: Sparidae)
title_full_unstemmed Dedicated dads: a study on the nesting behaviour of Spondyliosoma emarginatum (Telostei: Sparidae)
title_short Dedicated dads: a study on the nesting behaviour of Spondyliosoma emarginatum (Telostei: Sparidae)
title_sort dedicated dads a study on the nesting behaviour of spondyliosoma emarginatum telostei sparidae
topic biological sciences
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33661
work_keys_str_mv AT faurebeaulieunina dedicateddadsastudyonthenestingbehaviourofspondyliosomaemarginatumtelosteisparidae