Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Life history, diet and distribution of three grenadier species in South Africa

The Macrouridae are a diverse and varied family of deep-sea fishes which, barring a few commercially exploited species, have not received sufficient scientific attention. A lack of basic life history data in the species Coelorinchus braueri, Coelorinchus simorhynchus, and Malacocephalus laevis preve...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Baur, Niclas
Other Authors: Attwood, Colin
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2025
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613247807422464
access_status_str Open Access
author Baur, Niclas
author2 Attwood, Colin
author_browse Attwood, Colin
Baur, Niclas
author_facet Attwood, Colin
Baur, Niclas
author_sort Baur, Niclas
collection Thesis
description The Macrouridae are a diverse and varied family of deep-sea fishes which, barring a few commercially exploited species, have not received sufficient scientific attention. A lack of basic life history data in the species Coelorinchus braueri, Coelorinchus simorhynchus, and Malacocephalus laevis prevents assessments of their stocks and their vulnerability to bycatch mortality in the South African offshore trawl fishery. To remedy this, more than 500 specimens across the three species were collected over the course of a year from the South African west and south coasts, with sampling occurring every 1–3 months. These were measured and dissected to provide data on distribution, morphometrics, biometrics, growth, age structure, diet, reproduction, and parasites. A von Bertalanffy regression was fitted to Coelorinchus braueri growth data, and length-weight regressions were fitted for all three species. Stomach dissections were used to identify prey taxa and calculate their index of relative importance, reproductive seasonality was assessed, and the ovarian organisation of Coelorinchus simorhynchus and Malacocephalus laevis were described. Macroscopic and histological images of female and male gonads are presented here for the first time. These were used to measure sexual development phase and investigate reproductive seasonality. The life history data were interpreted in the context of the deep-sea habitat occupied by these species and the limitations inherent in studying trawl-captured deep-sea fishes and macrourids in general. Comparisons between information revealed here and previous studies on grenadiers were made where possible. Morphometric estimations for total length (TL) from pre-anal fin length (PAFL) were determined to be as follows: TL = 2.22 * PAFL + 56.7 (C. braueri), TL = 2.84* PAFL + 66.0 (C. simorhynchus), and TL = 3.73 * PAFL + 136.0 (M. laevis). In all species females were larger than males. No clear patterns of PAFL or average mass with depth were found. Sex ratios did not consistently vary with depth, but were different on the west and south coasts. Gonado-somatic index (GSI) was typically less than 1% in males and between 2% and 8% in females. No evidence for strong reproductive seasonality was found. C. braueri showed isometric growth (Mass = 8.36x10-5 * PAFL2.97), and had a PAFL50 of 107 (females) and 89 mm (males). A von Bertalanffy regression for this species was estimated as PAFLt = 169.13*(1 – e -0.10*(t - (-1.73) ) ), and the maximum observed age of 17 years was roughly in line with what is known from this genus. C. braueri preyed primarily on small crustaceans and teleost fish. The sex ratio in this species was biased towards females, with mean female GSI of 3.2%. The copepod Sphyrion quadricornis was found on this species, along with unidentified chondracanthid copepods in the gill chamber. C. simorhynchus showed isometric growth (Mass = 1.12x10-4 * PAFL3.08) and had a PAFL50 of 71 (females) and 32 mm (males). C. simorhynchus preyed primarily on a mix of crustaceans, ophiuroids and teleosts. The sex ratio in this species was biased towards females, with mean female GSI of 3.7%. The ovaries in this species were categorised as asynchronous. The copepod Sphyrion quadricornis was found on this species. M. laevis showed hypoallometric growth (Mass = 2.09x10-3 * PAFL2.59). M. laevis preyed primarily on teleosts and cephalopods, as well as some large prawns. The sex ratio in this species was roughly equal, with mean female GSI of 2.6%. The ovaries in this species were categorised as group synchronous. Unidentified chondracanthid copepod parasites were found in the gill chamber of this species. External parasites were identified where possible. The parasite loads and their locations on the specimens were described. Both Coelorinchus species were found to be parasitised externally by copepod Sphyrion quadricornis, while C. braueri and M. laevis were beset by unknown chondracanthid gill copepods. It is evident that much work remains to be done before these species, and other less wellresearched macrourids may be incorporated into ecosystem and fisheries models or before their stocks and vulnerability may be assessed. Furthermore, it is clear that these species of grenadiers differ in many of their life history characteristics. Future models and fisheries policies must not treat grenadiers interchangeably, but rather consider them on a species-byspecies basis where possible.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41470
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:07.122Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41470 Life history, diet and distribution of three grenadier species in South Africa Baur, Niclas Attwood, Colin Biological Sciences The Macrouridae are a diverse and varied family of deep-sea fishes which, barring a few commercially exploited species, have not received sufficient scientific attention. A lack of basic life history data in the species Coelorinchus braueri, Coelorinchus simorhynchus, and Malacocephalus laevis prevents assessments of their stocks and their vulnerability to bycatch mortality in the South African offshore trawl fishery. To remedy this, more than 500 specimens across the three species were collected over the course of a year from the South African west and south coasts, with sampling occurring every 1–3 months. These were measured and dissected to provide data on distribution, morphometrics, biometrics, growth, age structure, diet, reproduction, and parasites. A von Bertalanffy regression was fitted to Coelorinchus braueri growth data, and length-weight regressions were fitted for all three species. Stomach dissections were used to identify prey taxa and calculate their index of relative importance, reproductive seasonality was assessed, and the ovarian organisation of Coelorinchus simorhynchus and Malacocephalus laevis were described. Macroscopic and histological images of female and male gonads are presented here for the first time. These were used to measure sexual development phase and investigate reproductive seasonality. The life history data were interpreted in the context of the deep-sea habitat occupied by these species and the limitations inherent in studying trawl-captured deep-sea fishes and macrourids in general. Comparisons between information revealed here and previous studies on grenadiers were made where possible. Morphometric estimations for total length (TL) from pre-anal fin length (PAFL) were determined to be as follows: TL = 2.22 * PAFL + 56.7 (C. braueri), TL = 2.84* PAFL + 66.0 (C. simorhynchus), and TL = 3.73 * PAFL + 136.0 (M. laevis). In all species females were larger than males. No clear patterns of PAFL or average mass with depth were found. Sex ratios did not consistently vary with depth, but were different on the west and south coasts. Gonado-somatic index (GSI) was typically less than 1% in males and between 2% and 8% in females. No evidence for strong reproductive seasonality was found. C. braueri showed isometric growth (Mass = 8.36x10-5 * PAFL2.97), and had a PAFL50 of 107 (females) and 89 mm (males). A von Bertalanffy regression for this species was estimated as PAFLt = 169.13*(1 – e -0.10*(t - (-1.73) ) ), and the maximum observed age of 17 years was roughly in line with what is known from this genus. C. braueri preyed primarily on small crustaceans and teleost fish. The sex ratio in this species was biased towards females, with mean female GSI of 3.2%. The copepod Sphyrion quadricornis was found on this species, along with unidentified chondracanthid copepods in the gill chamber. C. simorhynchus showed isometric growth (Mass = 1.12x10-4 * PAFL3.08) and had a PAFL50 of 71 (females) and 32 mm (males). C. simorhynchus preyed primarily on a mix of crustaceans, ophiuroids and teleosts. The sex ratio in this species was biased towards females, with mean female GSI of 3.7%. The ovaries in this species were categorised as asynchronous. The copepod Sphyrion quadricornis was found on this species. M. laevis showed hypoallometric growth (Mass = 2.09x10-3 * PAFL2.59). M. laevis preyed primarily on teleosts and cephalopods, as well as some large prawns. The sex ratio in this species was roughly equal, with mean female GSI of 2.6%. The ovaries in this species were categorised as group synchronous. Unidentified chondracanthid copepod parasites were found in the gill chamber of this species. External parasites were identified where possible. The parasite loads and their locations on the specimens were described. Both Coelorinchus species were found to be parasitised externally by copepod Sphyrion quadricornis, while C. braueri and M. laevis were beset by unknown chondracanthid gill copepods. It is evident that much work remains to be done before these species, and other less wellresearched macrourids may be incorporated into ecosystem and fisheries models or before their stocks and vulnerability may be assessed. Furthermore, it is clear that these species of grenadiers differ in many of their life history characteristics. Future models and fisheries policies must not treat grenadiers interchangeably, but rather consider them on a species-byspecies basis where possible. 2025-06-23T13:03:59Z 2025-06-23T13:03:59Z 2025 2025-06-23T12:53:22Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41470 Eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape town
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Baur, Niclas
Life history, diet and distribution of three grenadier species in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Life history, diet and distribution of three grenadier species in South Africa
title_full Life history, diet and distribution of three grenadier species in South Africa
title_fullStr Life history, diet and distribution of three grenadier species in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Life history, diet and distribution of three grenadier species in South Africa
title_short Life history, diet and distribution of three grenadier species in South Africa
title_sort life history diet and distribution of three grenadier species in south africa
topic Biological Sciences
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41470
work_keys_str_mv AT baurniclas lifehistorydietanddistributionofthreegrenadierspeciesinsouthafrica