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Updating the estimation of age and growth of yellowfin tuna in the Indian Ocean using otoliths

Reference: 
IOTC-2023-WPTT25-20
File: 
PDF icon IOTC-2023-WPTT25-20_-_YFT_growth.pdf
Type: 
Meeting documents
Year: 
2023
Meeting: 
Working Party on Tropical Tunas (WPTT)
Meeting session: 
25
Availability: 
19 October 2023
Authors: 
Jessica Farley
Kyne Krusic-Golub
Paige Eveson
Patricia L. Luque
Igaratza Fraile
Iraide Artetxe-Arrate
Iker Zudaire
Evgeny Romanov
Umair Shahid
Shoaib Abdul Razzaque
Denham Parker
Naomi Clear
Hilario Murua
Francis Marsac
Gorka Merino
Abstract: 

This paper provides an update on yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares) otolith ageing activities in the western Indian Ocean that have occurred since Farley et al. (2021). Age estimates were obtained for 136 yellowfin tuna, using both daily (n=46) and annual (n=90) ageing methods. The youngest was aged 44 days and the oldest was 11.4 years. The new age data were combined with age data obtained in the ‘GERUNDIO’ project1 (Farley et al. 2021), providing a total of 386 age estimates for analysis. Four growth models were fit to the age and length data (von Bertalanffy (VB), Richards, VB log k, and 2-stage VB), with the 2-stage VB model providing the best fit, particularly for small fish (< ~55 cm fork length, FL). The length-at-otolith weight data (which is independent of the age estimation method) showed a change in otolith growth at ~55 cm FL, which is consistent with the length-at-age data and lends support to the 2-stage VB model. Overall, our analysis shows that fish grow rapidly after birth, reaching ~60 cm FL by age 1 and ~95 cm FL by age 2. Mean asymptotic length was estimated to be ~167 cm FL, slightly higher than estimated in Farley et al. (2021). The updated data analysis indicates that males reach larger sizes, on average, than females We continue to recommend that additional otoliths are collected from the northern and eastern regions of the Indian Ocean, and that these otoliths are aged to provide further information on growth and longevity of yellowfin tuna at the oceanic scale. These data will be useful for assessing whether there are regional differences in growth, and may also provide information regarding inter-annual variation in growth.

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