Rutgers marine researchers and New Jersey fishermen are piecing
together the details of the strange, gender-bending sex lives of black
sea bass – a study that could improve understanding of the bass
population and help the beleaguered recreational fishing industry.
Scientists
have long known black sea bass are “protogynous hermaphrodites,” a
species in which fish that begin life as females can switch gender to
male. But the details of how and why that happens are not completely
understood.
Now, there’s thinking the change is triggered when the
number of males in a local population declines. Not enough guys? Some
black sea bass ladies make the switch.
“It sounds crazy, right? But from an evolutionary perspective, it’s a perfect way to keep balance in a population,” said Olaf Jensen,
an assistant professor with Rutgers’ Department of Marine and Coastal
Science leading the project. “If it’s operating out in nature, maybe we
don’t have to worry so much about fishing pressure removing the big
males and skewing the sex ratio.”
This self-propelling sex change
could help biologists and government fisheries managers to better assess
the overall black sea bass stock, calculations that up to now have been
forcing season closures and lost money for the shore’s party and
charter boat fleet. Ignoring the influence of sex changes on population
dynamics could lead to mistakes in estimating the stock size and how
fishing seasons and catch limits should be set.
0 comments:
Post a Comment