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==Behaviour and life history==
==Behaviour and life history==
''Argyrosomus regius'' is a [[demersal]], [[oceanodromous]] fish which is found in inshore waters and on the [[continental shelf]], it can occur close to the bottom as well as in surface and mid-waters. The adults prey on [[grey mullet]] and [[Clupeidae|clupeids]] such as sardines<ref name = Glaucus/> which are actively pursued in open water. The adults gather in inshore waters to spawn during spring and summer. The juveniles and subadults prefer estuaries and coastal lagoons, and the health of recruitment into the adult population is possibly determined by the availability of these habitats. These fish are migratory, at all ages, migrating along shore or between offshore and inshore waters in response to temperature changes. ''A. regius'' feeds on fishes and swimming crustaceans and mostly occurs over sand, close to rocks, at 1–200 m max, but commonly found at 15–100 m. The three main spawning sites in the North Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea are the [[Nile delta]], [[Dakhlet Nouadhibou|Lévrier Bay]], and the [[Gironde]] estuary and with large numbers of adults congregate at these sites between May and July.<ref name="iucn status 20 November 2021" /> Large schools of ''A. regius'' occur around wrecked ships that were deliberately sunk to create new habitat for a number of commercially caught species of fish. Most of their growth happens during the summer months and feeding activity is significantly reduced when the water temperature drops below 13-15&nbsp;°C.<ref name = FAO/>
''Argyrosomus regius'' is a [[demersal]], [[oceanodromous]] fish which is found in inshore waters and on the [[continental shelf]], it can occur close to the bottom as well as in surface and mid-waters. The adults prey on [[grey mullet]] and [[Clupeidae|clupeids]] such as sardines<ref name = Glaucus/> which are actively pursued in open water. The adults gather in inshore waters to spawn during spring and summer. The juveniles and subadults prefer estuaries and coastal lagoons, and the health of recruitment into the adult population is possibly determined by the availability of these habitats. These fish are migratory, at all ages, migrating along shore or between offshore and inshore waters in response to temperature changes. ''A. regius'' feeds on fishes and swimming crustaceans and mostly occurs over sand, close to rocks, at 1–200 m max, but commonly found at 15–100 m. The three main spawning sites in the North Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea are the [[Nile delta]], [[Dakhlet Nouadhibou|Lévrier Bay]], and the [[Gironde]] estuary and with large numbers of adults congregate at these sites between May and July.<ref name="iucn status 20 November 2021" /> Large schools of ''A. regius'' occur around wrecked ships that were deliberately sunk to create new habitat for a number of commercially caught species of fish. Most of their growth happens during the summer months and feeding activity is significantly reduced when the water temperature drops below 13–15&nbsp;°C.<ref name = FAO/>


The newly hatched juveniles leave the estuaries where they spend the first few months at the end of summer and move into coastal waters with depths between 20 and 40 m where they spend the winter months. In the following Spring they return to their estuarine feeding areas from the middle of May. Water temperature is the most important factor that determines the trophic migration and reproduction of meagre. An adult female ''A. regius'' measuring 1.2m in length produces about 800,000 eggs and spawning occurs when the water temperature is 17-22&nbsp;°C. The juveniles eat small demersal fish and crustaceans switching to pelagic fish and cephalopods once they grow to 30–40&nbsp;cm in length.<ref name = FAO/>
The newly hatched juveniles leave the estuaries where they spend the first few months at the end of summer and move into coastal waters with depths between 20 and 40 m where they spend the winter months. In the following Spring they return to their estuarine feeding areas from the middle of May. Water temperature is the most important factor that determines the trophic migration and reproduction of meagre. An adult female ''A. regius'' measuring 1.2m in length produces about 800,000 eggs and spawning occurs when the water temperature is 17–22&nbsp;°C. The juveniles eat small demersal fish and crustaceans switching to pelagic fish and cephalopods once they grow to 30–40&nbsp;cm in length.<ref name = FAO/>


==Fisheries==
==Fisheries==

Revision as of 14:00, 1 March 2022

Argyrosomus regius
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Acanthuriformes
Family: Sciaenidae
Genus: Argyrosomus
Species:
A. regius
Binomial name
Argyrosomus regius
Asso, 1801[2]
Synonyms[2]
  • Sciaena aquila Cuvier, 1817
  • Perca regia Asso, 1801
  • Argyrosomus regium (Asso, 1801)
  • Sciaena regius (Asso, 1801)
  • Cheilodipterus aquila Lacepède, 1803
  • Sciaena aquila (Lacepède, 1803)
  • Perca vanloo Risso, 1810
  • Argyrosomus procerus De la Pylaie, 1835
  • Sciaena umbra (non Linnaeus, 1758)
  • Johnius hololepidotus (non Lacepède, 1801)

Argyrosomus regius, also known as the meagre, croaker, jewfish, shade-fish, sowa, kir, corvina, salmon-bass or stone bass, is a fish of the family Sciaenidae. It is similar in form to a European seabass, with a pearly-silver coloration and a yellow-coloured mouth. Length can range from 40–50 centimetres (16–20 in) to 2 metres (6+12 ft) long, with weights up to 55 kilograms (121 lb).

Taxonomy

Argyrosomus regius was first formally described in 1901 as Perca regia by the Spanish diplomat, naturalist, lawyer and historian Ignacio Jordán Claudio de Asso y del Rio with the type locality given as La Rochelle in Charente-Maritime on the Bay of Biscay coast of France.[3] The specific name regius means “royal”, this was not explained by Asso but may be a Latinisation of the Catalan name for this species, reix.[4]

Description

Argyrosomus regius has a relatively large head with quite small eyes, the large mouth is at the terminal position and it has an elongated body. The lateral line is easily seen and extends all the way to the caudal fin. The rear dorsal fin is much longer than first one which has nine rays. The first ray of the anal fin is short and spiny while the second is very thin. The swim bladder contains several branched appendages which are vibrated to make a grunting sound which can be heard from up to 30m away and this grunting is produced by the males during the spawning season. Body colour pearly-silver, with bronze traits dorsally. The fin bases are reddish brown and mouth cavity yellow-gold or salmon pink. The scales are large and every fourth scale is set at a different angle from the rest. It can grow to 2m in length and 50 kg in weight.[5][6]

Distribution

Argyrosomus regius is found in the eastern Atlantic from Norway to West Africa, including the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea. It has colonised the Red Sea by migrating through the Suez Canal, an anti-Lessepsian migration.[2] In Europe it is rare off the British Isles (three records) and Scandinavia.[6]

Behaviour and life history

Argyrosomus regius is a demersal, oceanodromous fish which is found in inshore waters and on the continental shelf, it can occur close to the bottom as well as in surface and mid-waters. The adults prey on grey mullet and clupeids such as sardines[6] which are actively pursued in open water. The adults gather in inshore waters to spawn during spring and summer. The juveniles and subadults prefer estuaries and coastal lagoons, and the health of recruitment into the adult population is possibly determined by the availability of these habitats. These fish are migratory, at all ages, migrating along shore or between offshore and inshore waters in response to temperature changes. A. regius feeds on fishes and swimming crustaceans and mostly occurs over sand, close to rocks, at 1–200 m max, but commonly found at 15–100 m. The three main spawning sites in the North Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea are the Nile delta, Lévrier Bay, and the Gironde estuary and with large numbers of adults congregate at these sites between May and July.[1] Large schools of A. regius occur around wrecked ships that were deliberately sunk to create new habitat for a number of commercially caught species of fish. Most of their growth happens during the summer months and feeding activity is significantly reduced when the water temperature drops below 13–15 °C.[5]

The newly hatched juveniles leave the estuaries where they spend the first few months at the end of summer and move into coastal waters with depths between 20 and 40 m where they spend the winter months. In the following Spring they return to their estuarine feeding areas from the middle of May. Water temperature is the most important factor that determines the trophic migration and reproduction of meagre. An adult female A. regius measuring 1.2m in length produces about 800,000 eggs and spawning occurs when the water temperature is 17–22 °C. The juveniles eat small demersal fish and crustaceans switching to pelagic fish and cephalopods once they grow to 30–40 cm in length.[5]

Fisheries

Argyrosomus regius is fished for commercially using trawls, long lines, and hand lines. It is also a sport fishing quarry species.[1] Specimens of 1.8 m in length and over 50 kg in weight which were landed in Portugal in 2002 fetched over €200.[7] The main meagre fisheries are currently in Mauritania, Morocco, and Egypt and these account for over 80% of the annual world catch of around 10,000 tonnes. The European fisheries are comparatively small and are on the Atlantic coasts of Spain, Portugal and France with annual catches of 800 t in France, 400 t in Portugal and 150 t in Spain.[7]

Aquaculture

The farming of Argyrosomus regius is still rather experimental and involves intensive production, in land-based tanks and sea cages. There are few facilities established mainly in southern France where they are in the Camargue, Cannes, and Corsica, in Huelva, Spain, and at La Spezia and Laguna di Orbetello in Italy.[5] It is also produced in large quantities in Turkey.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b c Pollard, D.A.; Bizsel, K. (2020). "Argyrosomus regius". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T198706A130099146. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-2.RLTS.T198706A130099146.en. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c "Argyrosomus regius (Asso, 1801)". Fishbase.org. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  3. ^ Eschmeyer, William N.; Fricke, Ron & van der Laan, Richard (eds.). "Species in the genus Argyrosomus". Catalog of Fishes. California Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  4. ^ Christopher Scharpf & Kenneth J. Lazara, eds. (21 May 2021). "Series Eupercaria (Incertae sedis): Families Callanthidae, Centrogenyidae, Dinolestidse, Dinopercidae, Emmelichthyidae, Malacanthidae, Monodactylidae, Moronidae, Parascorpididae, Sciaenidae and Sillaginidae". The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database. Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara. Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d "Cultured Aquatic Species Information Programme Argyrosomus regius (Asso, 1801)". Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  6. ^ a b c "Argyrosomus regius". British Marine Life Study Society. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  7. ^ a b Prista, Nuno Miguel Guerra Geoffroy (2013). "1". Argyrosomus regius (Asso, 1801) fishery and ecology in Portuguese waters, with reference to its relationships to other European and African populations (PDF) (Ph.D.). Universidad de Lisboa. Retrieved 26 December 2016.