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The University of Southern Mississippi

1996

Gulf of Mexico

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Gonadal Maturation In The Cobia, Rachycentron Canadum, From The Northcentral Gulf Of Mexico, Jeffrey M. Lotz, Robin M. Overstreet, James S. Franks Jan 1996

Gonadal Maturation In The Cobia, Rachycentron Canadum, From The Northcentral Gulf Of Mexico, Jeffrey M. Lotz, Robin M. Overstreet, James S. Franks

Gulf and Caribbean Research

Gonadal maturation of cobia, Rachycentron canadum, was evaluated by examining 508 specimens from its recreational fishery. Specimens were collected off southeast Louisiana to northwest Florida by hook-and-line during February through October 1987-1991. Fork lengths (FL) of these fish ranged from 580-1,530 mm, with corresponding weights of 2.0-43.5 kg. The female:male ratio was 1:0.37. Using a combination of oocyte size frequency and histological assessment of many of the fish, we determined that females were ripe from May through September, with atretic oocytes occurring in some fish from July through October. Degenerating hydrated oocytes in July and October and the presence …


Food Of Cobia, Rachycentron Canadum, From The Northcentral Gulf Of Mexico, Gabriele H. Meyer, James S. Franks Jan 1996

Food Of Cobia, Rachycentron Canadum, From The Northcentral Gulf Of Mexico, Gabriele H. Meyer, James S. Franks

Gulf and Caribbean Research

The stomach contents of 403 cobia, Rachycentron canadum, caught in the northcentral Gulf of Mexico recreational fishery from April through October of 1987-1990 were examined. Cobia ranged from 373-1,530 mm in fork length. Of the 403 stomachs, 287 (71.2%) contained at least one identifiable prey taxon. Crustaceans, consisting primarily of portunid crabs, were the predominant food. Crustaceans occurred in 79.1% of the stomachs and comprised 77.6% of the total number of identifiable prey. The second most important prey category was fish which was dominated by hardhead catfish, Arius felis, and eels. Fish occurred in 58.5% of the stomachs …


Distribution Of Loxothylacus Texanus (Cirripedia: Rhizocephala) Parasitizing Crabs Of The Genus Callinectes In The Southwestern Gulf Of Mexico, Fernando Alvarez, Jorge Calderon Jan 1996

Distribution Of Loxothylacus Texanus (Cirripedia: Rhizocephala) Parasitizing Crabs Of The Genus Callinectes In The Southwestern Gulf Of Mexico, Fernando Alvarez, Jorge Calderon

Gulf and Caribbean Research

A preliminary study on the interaction between the parasitic barnacle Loxothylacus texanus and two of its host species, the blue crab Callinectes sapidus and the dark blue crab C. rathbunae, in the Gulf of Mexico is presented. Data were obtained from 923 crabs, 162 C. sapidus and 761 C. rathbunae, deposited in the Colección de Crustáceos, Instituto de Biologia, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), that were collected in 14 coastal lagoons and sites along the Mexican coast of the Gulf of Mexico. The distribution of L. texanus parasitizing each one of the host species, mean host size …


Aricidea (Allia) Bryani, A New Species Of Polychaete (Polychaeta: Paraonidae) From The Northern Gulf Of Mexico, Gary R. Gaston, Jerry A. Mclelland Jan 1996

Aricidea (Allia) Bryani, A New Species Of Polychaete (Polychaeta: Paraonidae) From The Northern Gulf Of Mexico, Gary R. Gaston, Jerry A. Mclelland

Gulf and Caribbean Research

Aricidea bryani, a new species of polychaete (Polychaeta: Paraonidae) belonging to the subgenus Allia Strelzov 1973, is described from shallow subtidal sediments along the northern shore of Mississippi Sound, an estuary of the northern Gulf of Mexico. The new species is distinguished from other members of the subgenus by the presence of tuberculate neuropodial lobes in the anterior 15-20 setigers, a cirriform median antenna that extends posteriorly to setiger three, and by modified neuropodial setae that are abruptly tapered at mid-length, but lack terminal aristae.