Yolked Oocyte Dynamics Support Agreement between Determinate- and Indeterminate-Method Estimates of Annual Fecundity for a Northeastern United States Population of American Shad

PLoS One. 2016 Oct 7;11(10):e0164203. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0164203. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

Reports of American shad fecundity identify two important themes regarding egg production in fishes. First, geographic variation occurs and is biologically meaningful. Shad annual fecundity decreases with increasing latitude, but predicted lifetime fecundity does not, because of a counter-gradient of survival probability, all of which can explain the adaptive significance of natal homing. Second, the appropriate method of measuring fecundity depends on the pattern of oocyte development. Historically, the relatively simple determinate-fecundity method was used; however, a recent study in a Virginia river indicates that this method may be biased, requiring the more complicated indeterminate method. We address both themes with collections from the 2015 shad spawning run in the Connecticut River, USA. Criteria for using a determinate method were satisfied for this northern population: 1) a size gap evident in the oocyte size frequency distribution, indicating group-synchronous development of yolked oocytes; 2) a decline, early in spawning, in the standing stock of yolked oocytes; and 3) low levels of atresia at the end of spawning. The determinate-method estimate of American shad annual (2015) fecundity (303,000 ± 73,400; mean ± sd) overlapped historic estimates for this and a neighboring river. The indeterminate-method estimate of annual (2015) fecundity (311,500 ± 4,500 sd) was not significantly different from the determinate-method estimate (Student's t-test, P > 0.05). In contrast, indeterminate-method estimates of annual fecundity for a Virginia population were twice as high as that measured by the determinate method in the past. This can all be explained by fundamentally different patterns of oogenesis (i.e., group synchrony versus asynchrony with respect to yolk development) at different latitudes. American shad, which is distributed within its native range from the Canadian maritimes to Florida, USA (50-30°N), may be particularly well suited to evaluate intra-specific variation in oocyte development, a relatively unexplored life history trait.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Female
  • Fertility / physiology*
  • Fishes / growth & development*
  • New England
  • Oocytes / growth & development*
  • Oogenesis / physiology
  • Reproduction / physiology
  • Seasons
  • United States

Grants and funding

This research was made possible by a grant from the Habitat Conservation Program at NOAA Fisheries' Great Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office. Cooperation between IAMC-CNR and NOAA Fisheries was supported by the RITMARE Project, funded by the Italian Ministry MIUR. Funders provided support in the form of salaries [EKT, JMB] or travel funds [RF, GB], but did not have any additional role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. However, a proposal was submitted to NOAA prior to the research, making them aware of research methods and designs.