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A big deal for fisheries

Media Photo/Video

May 10, 2018

A fishmonger weighing fish
download Download fish_in_balance_2.jpg

A new report in Science by a Smithsonian biologist Ross Robertson and colleagues shows that plus-sized females invest disproportionately more in the number of eggs and the size of each egg. Therefore, taking a single big fish has a bigger impact on the fish population than taking multiple small ones.

Courtesy Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute


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  • Tropical Research Institute

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Related Content

  • Big Fish Produce Disproportionately Bigger Eggs and More of Them

    What difference does it make whether an angler catches one big fish or two smaller fish, each half its weight? Experts assumed that big and small fish invest the same proportion of their energy to make eggs. But a new report in Science by a Smithsonian biologist and colleagues shows that plus-sized females invest disproportionately more in the number of eggs and the size of each egg.
    • May 10, 2018
    • News Release
    • Tropical Research Institute
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