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Acanthopagrus butcheri

The Black bream (Acanthopagrus butcheri), also commonly known as the southern black bream, southern bream and blue-nosed bream, is a species of anadromous ray-finned fish of the porgy family Sparidae. A deep-bodied fish, it is occasionally confused with other similar species that occur within its range, but is generally distinguished from these species by a lack of yellow ventral and anal fins. Southern black bream are endemic to the southern coasts of Australia from Shark Bay in Western Australia to Ulladulla, New South Wales, as well as Tasmania.

Acanthopagrus butcheri
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Spariformes
Family: Sparidae
Genus: Acanthopagrus
Species:
A. butcheri
Binomial name
Acanthopagrus butcheri
Munro, 1949
Distribution of Acanthopagrus butcheri
Synonyms[1]

Mylio australis Günther, 1859
Mylio butcheri Munro, 1949

The black bream is primarily an inhabitant of brackish waters of estuaries and coastal lakes, rarely entering the open ocean, as it cannot complete its life cycle in a fully marine environment. During the breeding season, the species is known to penetrate into the upper reaches of rivers to spawn, causing an influx of juveniles in the estuaries a few months later.[2] It is a opportunistic predator, consuming a wide range of crustaceans, molluscs, polychaetes and forage fish.

The southern black bream is a major target for both commercial and recreational fishing due to its high-quality flesh, with over 300 tonnes of yield taken each year by commercial fisheries. Anglers also pursue the fish for its sporting qualities, with the development of lure fishing for bream adding to this attraction. Aquaculture techniques for the species are being developed, but its slow growth rate poses a major hurdle to large scale food production.

Taxonomy and naming edit

The southern black bream is one of 20 species in the genus Acanthopagrus, part of the porgy family Sparidae.[3] The Sparidae are perciform fish in the suborder Percoidei.[4] The southern black bream was at first confused with its nearly identical east coast relative, the surf bream (Acanthopagrus australis), with specimens initially grouped under the name Mylio australis by Rudall, Hale and Sheriden.[5] In a 1949 review of the Australian "silver breams," Ian Munro found that M. australis was in fact two separate species, creating the new species name of Mylio butcheri to accommodate the southern black bream. Munro based this classification on a number of new specimens,[6] one of which was from the Gippsland Lakes, Victoria, which he designated to be the holotype. Mylio butcheri was later changed to Acanthopagrus butcheri when the true genus of the species was identified.[7]

Acanthopagrus butcheri has a number of common names, many of which are applied to a number of related fish species, both in Australia and worldwide. The species is commonly referred to in publications as the "southern black bream" to avoid confusion with the black sea bream and other closely related species loosely given the name "black bream." The species is known regionally by the names "black bream," "Perth bream," "Gippsland bream" and the "blue-nose bream."[8] The latter name is given to mature fish over 1 kg in weight, as at this point their snouts begin to develop a bluish tinge.[6] The Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts of the Federal Government designated black bream as preferred name.[1] Black bream has also been designated the standard name by the CSIRO Division of Marine and Atmospheric Research in commercial fishing in Australia.[9]

Description edit

The southern black bream has a deep, moderately compressed body, with both the dorsal and ventral profiles equally curved.[10] The mouth is of moderate size in comparison with the body, and contains six curved, peg like incisors in the front of both upper and lower jaws. The molars are set in series of four or five on each side of the upper jaw, and in series of three or four on the sides of the lower jaw, becoming smaller in size anteriorly.[10] The body is covered with large scales, which may be cycloid or weakly ctenoid in shape. The head is mostly scale-free, with the exception of parts of the operculum. A low, scaly sheath covers the bases of the soft dorsal, anal and caudal fins. The lateral line scale count is 52–58.[10] There is a single dorsal fin originating a little behind the posterior edge of the operculum, consisting of 10 to 13 spines set in front of 10 to 13 soft rays. The anal fin consists of 3 spines anterior to 8 to 10 soft rays, while the pectoral fin has 14 to 16 rays and the ventral has one large spine and 5 soft rays.[10] The southern black bream is golden brown or bronze coloured on the back and sides, with greenish reflections when fresh, while the belly and chin are white. The fins are all dusky in colour, with the caudal fin often a dusky olive brown.[6] The species has been known to reach a total maximum length of 60 cm (23+12 in) and a weight of 4 kg (8+34 lb) ,[11] but is much more common around 23–25 cm (9–9+34 in) and under 2 kg.[12]

Distribution and habitat edit

The southern black bream is endemic to southern Australia, inhabiting coastal waters from Shark Bay, Western Australia in the west to Mallacoota, Victoria in the east and south around the entire Tasmanian coastline.[13] The species is primarily an inshore species, although has been found on rare occasions on deeper reefs on the continental shelf.[7] Southern black bream primarily inhabit estuarine environments,[13] penetrating into the far reaches of freshwater creeks and rivers during the summer spawning season.[14] They are also known from a number of coastal lakes and intermittently open estuaries.[5] In estuarine and freshwater environments they seek out the cover of structures such as fallen tree branches, jetties, oyster leases[15] and rocky areas,[16] while in deeper areas of coastal lakes, they are often found over bare mud and sand substrates.[17] The species is rarely found in the ocean, but are often washed out of creeks during times of high river flow and are able to survive in the marine environment, where they inhabit inshore reefs and rocky shorelines.[16]

The species is most common in southern Victoria, where it inhabits numerous estuaries. The Gippsland Lakes, Mallacoota Inlet and Lake Tyers are the most densely populated bodies of water in the state and the species is often found along the coast.[18] It is not as prolific in South Australia, with the Coorong and Kangaroo Island being the main bream-producing areas in the state. The low numbers may be correlated with the state's lack of rivers and estuaries, although bream have been caught in unexpected areas, including the Gulfs, as well as deep rocky reefs off Streaky Bay in lobster traps.[5] Southern black bream are prevalent in southern Western Australia, with large numbers of estuaries holding the species. The Culham and Stokes Inlets are known to have large populations of the fish.[18]

Biology edit

Diet and feeding edit

Southern black bream are opportunistic omnivores,[16] consuming a wide range of prey, including sessile, burrowing, benthic and pelagic species. The diet of the species varies between rivers, with their opportunistic feeding methods showing little pattern between seasons, although they appear to have certain prey preferences when two or more possible prey species are present.[19] Crustaceans, including crabs, prawns, amphipods and copepods, are commonly taken, as are a number of polychaete and annelid worms. Bivalves such as mussels and cockles are crushed in the bream's powerful jaws, with small fish such as gobies and anchovies also taken.[5] Algae of the genus Enteromorpha are also a major component of most fish's diets. Fish feeding in the upper reaches of river have different prey, reflecting the freshwater fauna, with insects, hardyheads, tadpoles, brine shrimp and gastropods taken.[16] Studies from the Swan River suggest that there is a shift in diet with age. Younger fish consume amphipods, polychaetes and small individuals of various molluscs. The number of amphipods consumed decreased in the diets of older fish while the number of large molluscs, crabs and teleosts taken increased.[19] The fish actively forage the substrate while swimming with their head down, snapping their prey down with little chewing.[5]

Life cycle edit

Southern black bream become sexually mature at different ages throughout their range, with Western and South Australian fish maturing by two to three years of age, while Victorian fish mature at five years.[20] There is also a difference in maturation age between the sexes, as females generally mature one year later than males.[16] The timing of spawning is also variable over the species range, with fish in Western Australia able to spawn from July to November, South Australian fish spawning between November and January and Victorian fish in October to November. Reproducing fish migrate into the upper reaches of rivers and streams,[21] where they shed their eggs, with each fish producing up to three million per season. The eggs are small and pelagic, hatching two days or so after fertilisation.[18] The young bream spend the next four years of their lives living in rivers, estuaries and parts of the coastline, often seen schooling over seagrass beds in shallow reaches of estuaries. It is when they reach five years in age that fish living in the marine environment move offshore to deeper reefs, returning to the rivers to spawn, as they cannot complete their life cycle in the ocean.[22] Southern black bream are known to live to 29 years of age.[11]

A number of unusual reproductive features have been observed in the species including a number hermaphroditic individuals which have both functional ovaries and testes, with the ability for a change to the preference of one sex also occasionally observed.[23] The species has also been known to hybridise with the closely related species Acanthopagrus australis forming viable offspring, themselves able to backcross with the parent species. This is only known from one coastal lake where the two species are landlocked together for extended periods, promoting interbreeding and the production of offspring with morphological traits intermediate between the two species. The setting required to cause hybridisation, however is too rare to consider the two species subspecies, or even a single species.[24]

Predators edit

Apart from humans, a variety of seabirds are the southern black bream's main predators, with the pelican, little black cormorant and great cormorant prominent.[25] The species is also taken by larger fish including sharks, rays and a number of large predatory teleosts such as mulloway and flathead. A number of ectoparasites are known from the species, including species from the Copepoda, Monogenea, Branchiura, Isopoda and Hirudinea.[26]

Relationship to humans edit

Southern black bream are one of the most important species to both commercial and recreational fisheries throughout its range, valued for its flavoursome and moist flesh. Due to its marketability, as well as its high tolerance to a wide range of salinity,[27] the species has become a candidate for inland aquaculture in saline dams.

Commercial fishery edit

The southern black bream is one of the most important species to the commercial fisheries in both Victoria and southern Western Australia, although only small numbers are harvested in South Australian waters due to the lower populations. Victoria produces the majority of the catch, with the Gippsland region alone producing 80% of the state's haul. A. butcheri has been taken from the Gippsland Lakes since the 1880s when they were the predominantly targeted species, although during the 1920s mullet became the most frequently caught species in the lakes. The bream catch from the lakes now fluctuates between 200 and 400 tonnes per year.[18] The Mallacoota inlet and Lake Tyers make up the other important bream-producing regions of the state. In South Australia, bream are only commercially taken from the Coorong which has yielded 10 to 70 tonnes of the species per year since the 1970s.[18] In lower Western Australia the Culham and Stokes inlet produce the bulk of the state's catch, with annual hauls far greater now than during the early 1990s. During the 1970s and 1980s, Western Australia had a modest bream catch of around 26 tonnes per year, a figure which rocketed to 103.9 tonnes in the 1992/3 season before receding to around 28 tonnes per year since 2000.[16] The species is commonly taken by gill nets, beach seine and haul nets, as well as by handline. The fish are normally sold fresh whole or as fillets in local markets throughout the states they are taken in.[5]

Recreational fishery edit

 
A southern black bream caught from Snowy River, Victoria

Southern black bream have long been a favourite target for anglers who seek out the species for both its fighting qualities and high quality flesh. Bream are also popular due to their accessibility, with fish commonly caught from harbour and estuary banks, piers and rock walls, therefore eliminating the need for a boat in most regions. Research in Western Australia has shown that anglers take more bream than commercial fishermen, with a 1979 study indicating that at least 232 tonnes were taken,[16] more than double that of the commercial harvest at its peak, although with the advent of catch and release fishing this figure has dropped.[18]

Bream are commonly caught around structures within an estuary, including fallen branches, piers, rock walls, bridge abutments and other man made structures as well as on mud and sand banks where shellfish and crustaceans dwell.[28] Although bream are opportunistic feeders, they can often be very difficult to catch in areas subject to high fishing pressure. Light fishing lines and sinkers are used to avoid spooking the fish and, as with all fishing, live bait produces the best results. Various crustaceans such as nippers, prawns and crabs are commonly used alongside various species of beach and tube worm. Frozen and cut bait such as prawns, mussels, cockles and fish pieces are also effective.[8] Rigs are usually kept simple and light, with running ball or bean sinkers used on a light line from two up to four kilograms in breaking strength tied to a size 6 – 1 hook. In fast flowing waters, heavier sinkers may be needed to keep the bait in the target area long enough to be noticed by a fish. Burley is often introduced into the water, with chopped pilchards or chicken pellets soaked in fish oil popular amongst anglers.[29] In recent years, the use of lures and flies on southern black bream has been successfully developed, with the species known to attack both hard bodied minnow and spinnerbait type lures, as well as soft plastic lures and saltwater flies.[29]

The southern black bream is protected by size and bag limits in all the states it inhabits, which anglers must be aware of or face fines. In Western Australia the size limit is 25 cm with only 2 fish over 40 cm allowed to be taken from the Swan or Canning Rivers, while the bag limit varies throughout the state with West Coast allowing 4 per angler, Gascoyne 8 per angler, and Southern and Northern 20 per angler.[30] In South Australia the daily bag limit is 10 per person, with a minimum legal size of 30 cm,[31] which is the same limit as Victoria.[32]

Aquaculture edit

Southern black bream are relatively easy to grow in captivity, with fish usually spawning during their natural season without needing the addition of hormones.[33] Despite this, bream are not bred on a commercial basis due to a comparatively slow growth rate and a low fillet recovery. Studies by Sarre in 1999, however, showed that the species can survive well in saline ponds with deep enough waters as long as food is supplemented to the ponds. This has led to the proposal of the breeding of the species to stock inland saline ponds for the use of recreational fishing, much like trout and barramundi are stocked elsewhere in Australia. Although the growth rate is currently too slow for food production purposes, genetic selection may allow the breeding of faster-growing fish for market purposes. Southern black bream are currently bred to stock depleted estuaries, and thus their requirements for farming are already well known.[34]

Similar species edit

A number of other members of the Sparidae inhabit Australian waters and maybe confused with A. butcheri. The yellowfin bream, Acanthopagrus australis is the most similar species to A. butcheri, overlapping in northern Victoria, with hybridisation events suggesting a recent divergence time, allowing few genetic differences to accumulate between the species.[24] As its name suggests, the yellow fins of the yellowfin bream are distinctive. Overlapping the distribution of A. butcheri in the west is Acanthopagrus morrisoni, the western yellowfin bream, which can be distinguished by the prominent yellow ventral, anal and lower caudal fins.[13] The tarwhine, Rhabdosargus sarba, is also similar in shape, but possesses gold horizontal stripes which allow for identification.[13]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Australian Biological Resources Study (14 December 2012). "Species Acanthopagrus butcheri (Munro, 1949)". Australian Faunal Directory. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts, Australian Government. Retrieved 15 September 2015.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ Williams, J.; Hindell, J. S.; Swearer, S. E.; Jenkins, G. P. (2012). "Influence of freshwater flows on the distribution of eggs and larvae of black bream Acanthopagrus butcheri within a drought-affected estuary". Journal of Fish Biology. 80 (6): 2281–2301. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.2012.03283.x. ISSN 1095-8649. PMID 22551182.
  3. ^ Gomon, Martin F.; Bray, Dianne J. "Acanthopagrus". Fishes of Australia. Retrieved 25 April 2017.
  4. ^ "Acanthopagrus butcheri". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 30 September 2007.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Herman T-C. Weng (1971). "The Black Bream, Acanthopagrus butcheri (Munro): Its life history and fishery in South Australia". PhD Thesis. University of Adelaide. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ a b c Munro, Ian S. (1949). "Revision of Australian silver breams, Mylio and Rhabdosargus". Memoirs of the Queensland Museum. 12 (4): 182–223.
  7. ^ a b Hosese, D.F.; Bray, D.J.; Paxton, J.R.; Alen, G.R. (2007). Zoological Catalogue of Australia Vol. 35 (2) Fishes. Sydney: CSIRO. p. 1126. ISBN 978-0-643-09334-8.
  8. ^ a b Starling, Steve (1988). The Fisherman's handbook – How to find, identify and catch the top Australian angling fish. NSW: Angus and Robertson Publishers. ISBN 1-86460-130-2.
  9. ^ CSIRO Marine Research (2015). "Standard Fish Names in Australia (commercial species)". CAAB – Codes for Australian Aquatic Biota. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  10. ^ a b c d Scott, T.D.; C.J.M. Glover; R.V. Southcott (1980). Marine and Freshwater Fishes of South Australia 2nd Edition. Adelaide: Government Printer.
  11. ^ a b Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2014). "Acanthopagrus butcheri" in FishBase. August 2014 version.
  12. ^ Kuiter, R.H. (1993). Coastal fishes of south-eastern Australia. U.S.A: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 1-86333-067-4.
  13. ^ a b c d Hutchins, B.; Swainston, R. (1986). Sea Fishes of Southern Australia: Complete Field Guide for Anglers and Divers. Melbourne: Swainston Publishing. p. 187. ISBN 1-86252-661-3.
  14. ^ Hoeksema, S.D.; I.C. Potter (2006). . Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science. Elsevier. 67 (3): 503–520. Bibcode:2006ECSS...67..503H. doi:10.1016/j.ecss.2005.12.003. Archived from the original on 2011-05-20. Retrieved 2007-10-10.
  15. ^ Connell, S.D.; M.J. Anderson (1999). "Predation by fish on assemblages of intertidal epibiota: effects of predator size and patch size". Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology. Elsevier. 241 (1): 15–29. doi:10.1016/S0022-0981(99)00067-2.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Norris, J.V.; J.E. Tregonning; R.C.J. Lenanton; G.A. Sorre (2002). . Fisheries Research Report. Perth: Department of Fisheries, Government of Western Australia. 93. Archived from the original on 2007-10-05. Retrieved 2007-10-03.
  17. ^ Hobday, D.; M. Moran (1983). "Age, growth and fluctuating year class strength of Black Bream in Gippsland Lakes, Victoria". Internal Report. Melbourne: Victorian Ministry for Conservation. Marine Sciences Laboratories. 20.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Kailola, P.J.; M.J Williams; R.E. Stewart (1993). Australian fisheries resources. Canberra: Bureau of Resource Sciences. ISBN 0-642-18876-9.
  19. ^ a b Sarre, G.A.; M.E. Platell; I.C. Potter (2000). "Do the dietary compositions of Acanthopagrus butcheri in four estuaries and a coastal lake vary with body size and season and within and amongst these water bodies?". Journal of Fish Biology. Blackwell Synergy. 56 (1): 103–122. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.2000.tb02089.x.
  20. ^ Morison, Alexander K.; Patrick C. Coutin; Simon G. Robertson (1998). "Age determination of black bream, Acanthopagrus butcheri (Sparidae), from the Gippsland Lakes of south-eastern Australia indicates slow growth and episodic recruitment". Marine and Freshwater Research. CSIRO. 48 (6): 491–498. doi:10.1071/MF97237.
  21. ^ Kanandjembo, A.N.; I. C. Potter; M. E. Platell (2001). "Abrupt shifts in the fish community of the hydrologically variable upper estuary of the Swan River". Hydrological Processes. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 15 (13): 2503–2517. Bibcode:2001HyPr...15.2503K. doi:10.1002/hyp.295. S2CID 128493821.
  22. ^ Burridge, Christopher P.; Vincent L. Versace (2007). "Population Genetic Structuring in Acanthopagrus butcheri (Pisces: Sparidae): Does Low Gene Flow Among Estuaries Apply to Both Sexes?". Marine Biotechnology. Springer Science+Business Media, Inc. 9 (1): 33–44. doi:10.1007/s10126-006-6023-7. PMID 16937020. S2CID 36465594.
  23. ^ Rowland, S.J.; R. Snape. "Labile protogynous hermaphroditism in the black bream, Acanthopagrus butcheri (Munro) (Sparidae)". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. 114 (1): 225–232. ISSN 0370-047X.
  24. ^ a b Rowland, S.J. (1984). "Hybridization between the Estuarine Fishes Yellowfin Bream, Acanthopagrus australis (Gunther), and Black Bream, A. butcheri (Munro)(Pisces : Sparidae)". Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research. CSIRO. 35 (4): 427–440. doi:10.1071/MF9840427.
  25. ^ Coutin, P.C.; Reside, J. (2003). "Fish predation by great cormorants, Phalacrocorax carbo carboides, in the Gippsland Lakes, south-eastern Australia". In Cowx, I.G. (ed.). Interactions between fish and birds: implications for management. Oxford: Fishing News Books. pp. 196–210. ISBN 0-632-06385-8.
  26. ^ Byrnes, T.; Rohde, K. (1992). "Geographical distribution and host specificity of ectoparasites of Australian bream, Acanthopagrus spp. (Sparidae)". Folia Parasitologica. 39 (3): 249–264. ISSN 0015-5683.
  27. ^ Partridge, Gavin J.; Greg I. Jenkins (2002). "The effect of salinity on growth and survival of juvenile black bream (Acanthopagrus butcheri)". Aquaculture. Elsevier. 210 (1): 219–230. doi:10.1016/S0044-8486(01)00817-1.
  28. ^ Horrobin, P. (1997). Guide to Favourite Australian Fish. Singapore: Universal Magazines. pp. 18–19.
  29. ^ a b Gill, Trevor (2004). (PDF). Southern Fisheries. Adelaide: Primary Industries SA. 9 (4): 6–10. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-08-30. Retrieved 2007-10-10.
  30. ^ Department of Fisheries (2007). . Government of Western Australia. Archived from the original on 2007-10-05. Retrieved 2007-10-10.
  31. ^ PIRSA Fisheries (2020). "Catch Limits & Legal Lengths". Black Bream. Government of South Australia. Retrieved 2020-03-16.
  32. ^ Department of Primary Industries (2007). . Limits and Closed Seasons. Government of Victoria. Archived from the original (pdf) on 2007-08-29. Retrieved 2007-10-10.
  33. ^ Partridge G.J., Jenkins G.I. & Frankish K.R. (2003) Hatchery Manual for the Production of Snapper (Pagrus auratus) and Black Bream (Acanthopagrus butcheri). WestOne Publishing, Perth, Australia.
  34. ^ Doupe, Robert G.; Gavin A. Sarre; Gavin J Partridge; Alan J Lymbery; Greg I Jenkins (2007). "What are the prospects for black bream Acanthopagrus butcheri (Munro) aquaculture in salt-affected inland Australia?". Aquaculture Research. Blackwell Synergy. 36 (14): 1345–1355. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2109.2005.01350.x.

External links edit

  • Primary Industries of Victoria: Brief comparison between black and yellowfin bream
  • Fisheries Western Australia – Black Bream Fact Sheet
  • Fishes of Australia : Acanthopagrus butcheri

acanthopagrus, butcheri, black, bream, also, commonly, known, southern, black, bream, southern, bream, blue, nosed, bream, species, anadromous, finned, fish, porgy, family, sparidae, deep, bodied, fish, occasionally, confused, with, other, similar, species, th. The Black bream Acanthopagrus butcheri also commonly known as the southern black bream southern bream and blue nosed bream is a species of anadromous ray finned fish of the porgy family Sparidae A deep bodied fish it is occasionally confused with other similar species that occur within its range but is generally distinguished from these species by a lack of yellow ventral and anal fins Southern black bream are endemic to the southern coasts of Australia from Shark Bay in Western Australia to Ulladulla New South Wales as well as Tasmania Acanthopagrus butcheriScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ActinopterygiiOrder SpariformesFamily SparidaeGenus AcanthopagrusSpecies A butcheriBinomial nameAcanthopagrus butcheriMunro 1949Distribution of Acanthopagrus butcheriSynonyms 1 Mylio australis Gunther 1859Mylio butcheri Munro 1949The black bream is primarily an inhabitant of brackish waters of estuaries and coastal lakes rarely entering the open ocean as it cannot complete its life cycle in a fully marine environment During the breeding season the species is known to penetrate into the upper reaches of rivers to spawn causing an influx of juveniles in the estuaries a few months later 2 It is a opportunistic predator consuming a wide range of crustaceans molluscs polychaetes and forage fish The southern black bream is a major target for both commercial and recreational fishing due to its high quality flesh with over 300 tonnes of yield taken each year by commercial fisheries Anglers also pursue the fish for its sporting qualities with the development of lure fishing for bream adding to this attraction Aquaculture techniques for the species are being developed but its slow growth rate poses a major hurdle to large scale food production Contents 1 Taxonomy and naming 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Biology 4 1 Diet and feeding 4 2 Life cycle 4 3 Predators 5 Relationship to humans 5 1 Commercial fishery 5 2 Recreational fishery 5 3 Aquaculture 6 Similar species 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy and naming editThe southern black bream is one of 20 species in the genus Acanthopagrus part of the porgy family Sparidae 3 The Sparidae are perciform fish in the suborder Percoidei 4 The southern black bream was at first confused with its nearly identical east coast relative the surf bream Acanthopagrus australis with specimens initially grouped under the name Mylio australis by Rudall Hale and Sheriden 5 In a 1949 review of the Australian silver breams Ian Munro found that M australis was in fact two separate species creating the new species name of Mylio butcheri to accommodate the southern black bream Munro based this classification on a number of new specimens 6 one of which was from the Gippsland Lakes Victoria which he designated to be the holotype Mylio butcheri was later changed to Acanthopagrus butcheri when the true genus of the species was identified 7 Acanthopagrus butcheri has a number of common names many of which are applied to a number of related fish species both in Australia and worldwide The species is commonly referred to in publications as the southern black bream to avoid confusion with the black sea bream and other closely related species loosely given the name black bream The species is known regionally by the names black bream Perth bream Gippsland bream and the blue nose bream 8 The latter name is given to mature fish over 1 kg in weight as at this point their snouts begin to develop a bluish tinge 6 The Department of the Environment Water Heritage and the Arts of the Federal Government designated black bream as preferred name 1 Black bream has also been designated the standard name by the CSIRO Division of Marine and Atmospheric Research in commercial fishing in Australia 9 Description editThe southern black bream has a deep moderately compressed body with both the dorsal and ventral profiles equally curved 10 The mouth is of moderate size in comparison with the body and contains six curved peg like incisors in the front of both upper and lower jaws The molars are set in series of four or five on each side of the upper jaw and in series of three or four on the sides of the lower jaw becoming smaller in size anteriorly 10 The body is covered with large scales which may be cycloid or weakly ctenoid in shape The head is mostly scale free with the exception of parts of the operculum A low scaly sheath covers the bases of the soft dorsal anal and caudal fins The lateral line scale count is 52 58 10 There is a single dorsal fin originating a little behind the posterior edge of the operculum consisting of 10 to 13 spines set in front of 10 to 13 soft rays The anal fin consists of 3 spines anterior to 8 to 10 soft rays while the pectoral fin has 14 to 16 rays and the ventral has one large spine and 5 soft rays 10 The southern black bream is golden brown or bronze coloured on the back and sides with greenish reflections when fresh while the belly and chin are white The fins are all dusky in colour with the caudal fin often a dusky olive brown 6 The species has been known to reach a total maximum length of 60 cm 23 1 2 in and a weight of 4 kg 8 3 4 lb 11 but is much more common around 23 25 cm 9 9 3 4 in and under 2 kg 12 Distribution and habitat editThe southern black bream is endemic to southern Australia inhabiting coastal waters from Shark Bay Western Australia in the west to Mallacoota Victoria in the east and south around the entire Tasmanian coastline 13 The species is primarily an inshore species although has been found on rare occasions on deeper reefs on the continental shelf 7 Southern black bream primarily inhabit estuarine environments 13 penetrating into the far reaches of freshwater creeks and rivers during the summer spawning season 14 They are also known from a number of coastal lakes and intermittently open estuaries 5 In estuarine and freshwater environments they seek out the cover of structures such as fallen tree branches jetties oyster leases 15 and rocky areas 16 while in deeper areas of coastal lakes they are often found over bare mud and sand substrates 17 The species is rarely found in the ocean but are often washed out of creeks during times of high river flow and are able to survive in the marine environment where they inhabit inshore reefs and rocky shorelines 16 The species is most common in southern Victoria where it inhabits numerous estuaries The Gippsland Lakes Mallacoota Inlet and Lake Tyers are the most densely populated bodies of water in the state and the species is often found along the coast 18 It is not as prolific in South Australia with the Coorong and Kangaroo Island being the main bream producing areas in the state The low numbers may be correlated with the state s lack of rivers and estuaries although bream have been caught in unexpected areas including the Gulfs as well as deep rocky reefs off Streaky Bay in lobster traps 5 Southern black bream are prevalent in southern Western Australia with large numbers of estuaries holding the species The Culham and Stokes Inlets are known to have large populations of the fish 18 Biology editDiet and feeding edit Southern black bream are opportunistic omnivores 16 consuming a wide range of prey including sessile burrowing benthic and pelagic species The diet of the species varies between rivers with their opportunistic feeding methods showing little pattern between seasons although they appear to have certain prey preferences when two or more possible prey species are present 19 Crustaceans including crabs prawns amphipods and copepods are commonly taken as are a number of polychaete and annelid worms Bivalves such as mussels and cockles are crushed in the bream s powerful jaws with small fish such as gobies and anchovies also taken 5 Algae of the genus Enteromorpha are also a major component of most fish s diets Fish feeding in the upper reaches of river have different prey reflecting the freshwater fauna with insects hardyheads tadpoles brine shrimp and gastropods taken 16 Studies from the Swan River suggest that there is a shift in diet with age Younger fish consume amphipods polychaetes and small individuals of various molluscs The number of amphipods consumed decreased in the diets of older fish while the number of large molluscs crabs and teleosts taken increased 19 The fish actively forage the substrate while swimming with their head down snapping their prey down with little chewing 5 Life cycle edit Southern black bream become sexually mature at different ages throughout their range with Western and South Australian fish maturing by two to three years of age while Victorian fish mature at five years 20 There is also a difference in maturation age between the sexes as females generally mature one year later than males 16 The timing of spawning is also variable over the species range with fish in Western Australia able to spawn from July to November South Australian fish spawning between November and January and Victorian fish in October to November Reproducing fish migrate into the upper reaches of rivers and streams 21 where they shed their eggs with each fish producing up to three million per season The eggs are small and pelagic hatching two days or so after fertilisation 18 The young bream spend the next four years of their lives living in rivers estuaries and parts of the coastline often seen schooling over seagrass beds in shallow reaches of estuaries It is when they reach five years in age that fish living in the marine environment move offshore to deeper reefs returning to the rivers to spawn as they cannot complete their life cycle in the ocean 22 Southern black bream are known to live to 29 years of age 11 A number of unusual reproductive features have been observed in the species including a number hermaphroditic individuals which have both functional ovaries and testes with the ability for a change to the preference of one sex also occasionally observed 23 The species has also been known to hybridise with the closely related species Acanthopagrus australis forming viable offspring themselves able to backcross with the parent species This is only known from one coastal lake where the two species are landlocked together for extended periods promoting interbreeding and the production of offspring with morphological traits intermediate between the two species The setting required to cause hybridisation however is too rare to consider the two species subspecies or even a single species 24 Predators edit Apart from humans a variety of seabirds are the southern black bream s main predators with the pelican little black cormorant and great cormorant prominent 25 The species is also taken by larger fish including sharks rays and a number of large predatory teleosts such as mulloway and flathead A number of ectoparasites are known from the species including species from the Copepoda Monogenea Branchiura Isopoda and Hirudinea 26 Relationship to humans editSouthern black bream are one of the most important species to both commercial and recreational fisheries throughout its range valued for its flavoursome and moist flesh Due to its marketability as well as its high tolerance to a wide range of salinity 27 the species has become a candidate for inland aquaculture in saline dams Commercial fishery edit The southern black bream is one of the most important species to the commercial fisheries in both Victoria and southern Western Australia although only small numbers are harvested in South Australian waters due to the lower populations Victoria produces the majority of the catch with the Gippsland region alone producing 80 of the state s haul A butcheri has been taken from the Gippsland Lakes since the 1880s when they were the predominantly targeted species although during the 1920s mullet became the most frequently caught species in the lakes The bream catch from the lakes now fluctuates between 200 and 400 tonnes per year 18 The Mallacoota inlet and Lake Tyers make up the other important bream producing regions of the state In South Australia bream are only commercially taken from the Coorong which has yielded 10 to 70 tonnes of the species per year since the 1970s 18 In lower Western Australia the Culham and Stokes inlet produce the bulk of the state s catch with annual hauls far greater now than during the early 1990s During the 1970s and 1980s Western Australia had a modest bream catch of around 26 tonnes per year a figure which rocketed to 103 9 tonnes in the 1992 3 season before receding to around 28 tonnes per year since 2000 16 The species is commonly taken by gill nets beach seine and haul nets as well as by handline The fish are normally sold fresh whole or as fillets in local markets throughout the states they are taken in 5 Recreational fishery edit nbsp A southern black bream caught from Snowy River VictoriaSee also Porgie fishing Southern black bream have long been a favourite target for anglers who seek out the species for both its fighting qualities and high quality flesh Bream are also popular due to their accessibility with fish commonly caught from harbour and estuary banks piers and rock walls therefore eliminating the need for a boat in most regions Research in Western Australia has shown that anglers take more bream than commercial fishermen with a 1979 study indicating that at least 232 tonnes were taken 16 more than double that of the commercial harvest at its peak although with the advent of catch and release fishing this figure has dropped 18 Bream are commonly caught around structures within an estuary including fallen branches piers rock walls bridge abutments and other man made structures as well as on mud and sand banks where shellfish and crustaceans dwell 28 Although bream are opportunistic feeders they can often be very difficult to catch in areas subject to high fishing pressure Light fishing lines and sinkers are used to avoid spooking the fish and as with all fishing live bait produces the best results Various crustaceans such as nippers prawns and crabs are commonly used alongside various species of beach and tube worm Frozen and cut bait such as prawns mussels cockles and fish pieces are also effective 8 Rigs are usually kept simple and light with running ball or bean sinkers used on a light line from two up to four kilograms in breaking strength tied to a size 6 1 hook In fast flowing waters heavier sinkers may be needed to keep the bait in the target area long enough to be noticed by a fish Burley is often introduced into the water with chopped pilchards or chicken pellets soaked in fish oil popular amongst anglers 29 In recent years the use of lures and flies on southern black bream has been successfully developed with the species known to attack both hard bodied minnow and spinnerbait type lures as well as soft plastic lures and saltwater flies 29 The southern black bream is protected by size and bag limits in all the states it inhabits which anglers must be aware of or face fines In Western Australia the size limit is 25 cm with only 2 fish over 40 cm allowed to be taken from the Swan or Canning Rivers while the bag limit varies throughout the state with West Coast allowing 4 per angler Gascoyne 8 per angler and Southern and Northern 20 per angler 30 In South Australia the daily bag limit is 10 per person with a minimum legal size of 30 cm 31 which is the same limit as Victoria 32 Aquaculture edit Southern black bream are relatively easy to grow in captivity with fish usually spawning during their natural season without needing the addition of hormones 33 Despite this bream are not bred on a commercial basis due to a comparatively slow growth rate and a low fillet recovery Studies by Sarre in 1999 however showed that the species can survive well in saline ponds with deep enough waters as long as food is supplemented to the ponds This has led to the proposal of the breeding of the species to stock inland saline ponds for the use of recreational fishing much like trout and barramundi are stocked elsewhere in Australia Although the growth rate is currently too slow for food production purposes genetic selection may allow the breeding of faster growing fish for market purposes Southern black bream are currently bred to stock depleted estuaries and thus their requirements for farming are already well known 34 Similar species editA number of other members of the Sparidae inhabit Australian waters and maybe confused with A butcheri The yellowfin bream Acanthopagrus australis is the most similar species to A butcheri overlapping in northern Victoria with hybridisation events suggesting a recent divergence time allowing few genetic differences to accumulate between the species 24 As its name suggests the yellow fins of the yellowfin bream are distinctive Overlapping the distribution of A butcheri in the west is Acanthopagrus morrisoni the western yellowfin bream which can be distinguished by the prominent yellow ventral anal and lower caudal fins 13 The tarwhine Rhabdosargus sarba is also similar in shape but possesses gold horizontal stripes which allow for identification 13 References edit a b Australian Biological Resources Study 14 December 2012 Species Acanthopagrus butcheri Munro 1949 Australian Faunal Directory Canberra Australian Capital Territory Department of the Environment Water Heritage and the Arts Australian Government Retrieved 15 September 2015 permanent dead link Williams J Hindell J S Swearer S E Jenkins G P 2012 Influence of freshwater flows on the distribution of eggs and larvae of black bream Acanthopagrus butcheri within a drought affected estuary Journal of Fish Biology 80 6 2281 2301 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8649 2012 03283 x ISSN 1095 8649 PMID 22551182 Gomon Martin F Bray Dianne J Acanthopagrus Fishes of Australia Retrieved 25 April 2017 Acanthopagrus butcheri Integrated Taxonomic Information System Retrieved 30 September 2007 a b c d e f Herman T C Weng 1971 The Black Bream Acanthopagrus butcheri Munro Its life history and fishery in South Australia PhD Thesis University of Adelaide a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c Munro Ian S 1949 Revision of Australian silver breams Mylio and Rhabdosargus Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 12 4 182 223 a b Hosese D F Bray D J Paxton J R Alen G R 2007 Zoological Catalogue of Australia Vol 35 2 Fishes Sydney CSIRO p 1126 ISBN 978 0 643 09334 8 a b Starling Steve 1988 The Fisherman s handbook How to find identify and catch the top Australian angling fish NSW Angus and Robertson Publishers ISBN 1 86460 130 2 CSIRO Marine Research 2015 Standard Fish Names in Australia commercial species CAAB Codes for Australian Aquatic Biota Canberra Australian Capital Territory Retrieved 15 September 2015 a b c d Scott T D C J M Glover R V Southcott 1980 Marine and Freshwater Fishes of South Australia 2nd Edition Adelaide Government Printer a b Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2014 Acanthopagrus butcheri in FishBase August 2014 version Kuiter R H 1993 Coastal fishes of south eastern Australia U S A University of Hawaii Press ISBN 1 86333 067 4 a b c d Hutchins B Swainston R 1986 Sea Fishes of Southern Australia Complete Field Guide for Anglers and Divers Melbourne Swainston Publishing p 187 ISBN 1 86252 661 3 Hoeksema S D I C Potter 2006 Diel seasonal regional and annual variations in the characteristics of the ichthyofauna of the upper reaches of a large Australian microtidal estuary Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science Elsevier 67 3 503 520 Bibcode 2006ECSS 67 503H doi 10 1016 j ecss 2005 12 003 Archived from the original on 2011 05 20 Retrieved 2007 10 10 Connell S D M J Anderson 1999 Predation by fish on assemblages of intertidal epibiota effects of predator size and patch size Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology Elsevier 241 1 15 29 doi 10 1016 S0022 0981 99 00067 2 a b c d e f g Norris J V J E Tregonning R C J Lenanton G A Sorre 2002 Biological synopsis of the Black Bream Acanthopagrus butcheri Munro Teleosti Sparidae in Western Australia with reference to information from other states Fisheries Research Report Perth Department of Fisheries Government of Western Australia 93 Archived from the original on 2007 10 05 Retrieved 2007 10 03 Hobday D M Moran 1983 Age growth and fluctuating year class strength of Black Bream in Gippsland Lakes Victoria Internal Report Melbourne Victorian Ministry for Conservation Marine Sciences Laboratories 20 a b c d e f Kailola P J M J Williams R E Stewart 1993 Australian fisheries resources Canberra Bureau of Resource Sciences ISBN 0 642 18876 9 a b Sarre G A M E Platell I C Potter 2000 Do the dietary compositions of Acanthopagrus butcheri in four estuaries and a coastal lake vary with body size and season and within and amongst these water bodies Journal of Fish Biology Blackwell Synergy 56 1 103 122 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8649 2000 tb02089 x Morison Alexander K Patrick C Coutin Simon G Robertson 1998 Age determination of black bream Acanthopagrus butcheri Sparidae from the Gippsland Lakes of south eastern Australia indicates slow growth and episodic recruitment Marine and Freshwater Research CSIRO 48 6 491 498 doi 10 1071 MF97237 Kanandjembo A N I C Potter M E Platell 2001 Abrupt shifts in the fish community of the hydrologically variable upper estuary of the Swan River Hydrological Processes John Wiley amp Sons Ltd 15 13 2503 2517 Bibcode 2001HyPr 15 2503K doi 10 1002 hyp 295 S2CID 128493821 Burridge Christopher P Vincent L Versace 2007 Population Genetic Structuring in Acanthopagrus butcheri Pisces Sparidae Does Low Gene Flow Among Estuaries Apply to Both Sexes Marine Biotechnology Springer Science Business Media Inc 9 1 33 44 doi 10 1007 s10126 006 6023 7 PMID 16937020 S2CID 36465594 Rowland S J R Snape Labile protogynous hermaphroditism in the black bream Acanthopagrus butcheri Munro Sparidae Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 114 1 225 232 ISSN 0370 047X a b Rowland S J 1984 Hybridization between the Estuarine Fishes Yellowfin Bream Acanthopagrus australis Gunther and Black Bream A butcheri Munro Pisces Sparidae Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research CSIRO 35 4 427 440 doi 10 1071 MF9840427 Coutin P C Reside J 2003 Fish predation by great cormorants Phalacrocorax carbo carboides in the Gippsland Lakes south eastern Australia In Cowx I G ed Interactions between fish and birds implications for management Oxford Fishing News Books pp 196 210 ISBN 0 632 06385 8 Byrnes T Rohde K 1992 Geographical distribution and host specificity of ectoparasites of Australian bream Acanthopagrus spp Sparidae Folia Parasitologica 39 3 249 264 ISSN 0015 5683 Partridge Gavin J Greg I Jenkins 2002 The effect of salinity on growth and survival of juvenile black bream Acanthopagrus butcheri Aquaculture Elsevier 210 1 219 230 doi 10 1016 S0044 8486 01 00817 1 Horrobin P 1997 Guide to Favourite Australian Fish Singapore Universal Magazines pp 18 19 a b Gill Trevor 2004 Secrets of the wily Black Bream PDF Southern Fisheries Adelaide Primary Industries SA 9 4 6 10 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 08 30 Retrieved 2007 10 10 Department of Fisheries 2007 Recreational Fishing Government of Western Australia Archived from the original on 2007 10 05 Retrieved 2007 10 10 PIRSA Fisheries 2020 Catch Limits amp Legal Lengths Black Bream Government of South Australia Retrieved 2020 03 16 Department of Primary Industries 2007 Recreational Fishing Guide Limits and Closed Seasons Government of Victoria Archived from the original pdf on 2007 08 29 Retrieved 2007 10 10 Partridge G J Jenkins G I amp Frankish K R 2003 Hatchery Manual for the Production of Snapper Pagrus auratus and Black Bream Acanthopagrus butcheri WestOne Publishing Perth Australia Doupe Robert G Gavin A Sarre Gavin J Partridge Alan J Lymbery Greg I Jenkins 2007 What are the prospects for black bream Acanthopagrus butcheri Munro aquaculture in salt affected inland Australia Aquaculture Research Blackwell Synergy 36 14 1345 1355 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2109 2005 01350 x External links editPrimary Industries of Victoria Brief comparison between black and yellowfin bream Fisheries Western Australia Black Bream Fact Sheet Western Angler information page Fishnet fact sheet Fishes of Australia Acanthopagrus butcheri Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Acanthopagrus butcheri amp oldid 1172247126, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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