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Patterns of color phase indicate spawn timing at a Nassau grouper Epinephelus striatus spawning aggregation

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Title Patterns of color phase indicate spawn timing at a Nassau grouper Epinephelus striatus spawning aggregation
Names Archer, Stephanie K. (creator)
Heppell, Scott A. (creator)
Semmens, Brice X. (creator)
Pattengill-Semmens, Christy V. (creator)
Bush, Phillippe G. (creator)
Mccoy, Croy M. (creator)
Johnson, Bradley C. (creator)
Date Issued 2012 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Current Zoology, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences and can be found at: http://www.actazool.org/.
Abstract Nassau grouper Epinephelus striatus are a large bodied, top level predator that is ecologically important throughout
the Caribbean. Although typically solitary, Nassau grouper form large annual spawning aggregations at predictable times in specific
locations. In 2003, The Cayman Islands Marine Conservation Board established protection for a newly rediscovered Nassau
grouper spawning aggregation on Little Cayman, British West Indies. The large size of this aggregation provides a unique opportunity
to study the behavior of Nassau grouper on a relatively intact spawning aggregation. During non-spawning periods Nassau
grouper display a reddish-brown-and-white barred coloration. However, while aggregating they exhibit three additional color
phases: “bicolor”, “dark”, and “white belly”. We video sampled the population on multiple days leading up to spawning across
five spawning years. Divers focused a laser caliper equipped video camera on individual fish at the aggregation. We later analyzed
the video to determine the length of the fish and record the color phase. Our observations show that the relative proportion
of fish in the bicolor color phase increases significantly on the day leading up to the primary night of spawning. The increase in
the proportion of the bicolor color phase from 0.05 early in the aggregation to 0.40 on the day of spawning suggests that this color
phase conveys that a fish is behaviorally and physiologically prepared to spawn. Additionally, 82.7% of fish exhibiting dark or
white belly coloration early in the aggregation period suggests that these color phases are not only shown by female fish as was
previously posited [Current Zoology 58 (1): 73–83, 2012].
Genre Article
Topic Nassau grouper
Identifier Archer, S., Heppell, S., Semmens, B., Pattengill-Semmens, C., Bush, P., Mccoy, C., & Johnson, B. (2012). Patterns of color phase indicate spawn timing at a nassau grouper epinephelus striatus spawning aggregation. Current Zoology, 58(1), 73-83.

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