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Acanthopagrus australis

Acanthopagrus australis, the yellowfin bream, also known as sea bream, surf bream, silver bream or eastern black bream, is a species of marine and freshwater fish of the porgy family, Sparidae. It is a deep-bodied fish, occasionally confused with Acanthopagrus butcheri (black bream), but is generally distinguished by its yellowish ventral and anal fins.[3] It is a popular target for recreational fishermen due to its capacity to fight well above its weight coupled with its table quality.[4]

Acanthopagrus australis
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Spariformes
Family: Sparidae
Genus: Acanthopagrus
Species:
A. australis
Binomial name
Acanthopagrus australis
(Günther, 1859)
Synonyms[2]

Chrysophrys australis Günther, 1859
Mylio australis (Günther, 1859)
Pagrus australis (Günther, 1859)
Sparus australis (Günther, 1859)
Roughleyia australis (Günther, 1859)

Taxonomy edit

A. australis is one of 20 species in the genus Acanthopagrus, part of the porgy family Sparidae.[5]

The species was first mentioned in scientific literature by Richard Owen in an 1853 work on skeletal material held by the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of England. Although he named it Chrysophrys australis, it was insufficiently described and hence designated a nomen nudum.[6] German-British naturalist Albert Günther formally described the surf bream in 1859 using Owen's name. Allan Riverstone McCulloch classified it in the genus Sparus in 1929. Texts up till 1949 used either of these binomial combinations.[7]

Ian Munro used the binomial name Mylio australis in a 1949 review of the Australian "silver breams", preferring Mylio over Acanthopagrus and Roughleya as he found it to be the oldest valid genus name available.[7] However, the validity of Mylio was questioned as its describer—Philibert Commerson—had listed the type as Sparus mylio.

Munro also 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,[7]

Acanthopagrus australis has a number of common names, many of which are applied to a number of related fish species, both in Australia and worldwide. It was known as the sea bream or surf bream during the spawning season, while black bream was a common name from New South Wales. In Queensland it was known simply as bream. Munro termed it the yellowfin bream.[7] The Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts of the Federal Government designated yellowfin bream as preferred name.[2] It has also been designated the standard name by the CSIRO Division of Marine and Atmospheric Research in commercial fishing in Australia.[8] Its name to the local Eora and Darug inhabitants of the Sydney basin has been transcribed as garuma, karngooma, caroom-a and kururma.[9]

The species has also been known to hybridise with the closely related southern black bream 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.[10]

Description edit

The yellowfin bream is a slower-growing species than the related black bream,[7] reaching a fork length of 23 cm (9 in) in five years, having matured when 22 cm (8.7 in) long.[11] The colour can be variable: fish caught in freshwater may be bronze- or brown-coloured, while those caught in estuarine or marine habitats are more silvery.[7]

A specimen measuring 56 cm (22 in) long and weighing 7 pounds 3 ounces was caught in the Georges River and reported in 1928, while another even longer specimen from the Clarence River was 58.5 cm (23 in) and 7 pounds 2 ounces.[7]

Distribution and habitat edit

Yellowfin bream are found along the east coast of Australia from around 19 S to 38 S—roughly from Townsville in northern Queensland to Mallacoota and the Gippsland Lakes region in eastern Victoria.[7] A yellowfin bream specimen was first identified in New Zealand waters in Piwhane / Spirits Bay in 1990, likely introduced by ship dispersal of juvenile fish.[12] Due to the large amount of fishing around Northland and the lack of subsequent specimens, it is unlikely that a population established.[12]

The bream inhabit estuaries in salt or brackish water up to the fresh water limit, and inshore rocky reef habitats near ocean beaches and rocky headlands.[13][12]

Breeding edit

Surf bream come downstream to river mouths during spawning season, typically winter,[12] where they spawn and the females lay planktonic eggs. These hatch after a few days, and the young remain in the estuaries.[14] Like other species of sparid fish, the surf bream have a gonad termed the ovotestis that is made up of ovarian tissue dorsally and testicular tissue ventrally, separated by connective tissue. The species is protandrous – male fish become female after the spawning season.[15] The eggs hatch after 2.5 days, after which they spend approximately four weeks as pelagic larvae.[12] Larvae and juvenile fish live exclusively in seagrass beds in shallow estuaries.[12]

Feeding edit

Carnivorous, the yellowfin bream is demersal, preying on small fishes and invertebrates such as crabs, shellfish, polychaete worms and ascidians that dwell at the bottom of estuaries.[14][12] They are fond of oysters, and can be found around oyster farms.[16]

Commercial fishing edit

The species is fished commercially, predominantly in northern New South Wales and southern Queensland, where it is one of the most commonly caught fish.[1][12] Fish are taken predominantly in autumn and winter in net and mesh traps. Recreational anglers are thought to catch twice as many fish as commercial fishers.[11] Remains of surf bream recovered from middens in New South Wales indicate it was eaten by indigenous Australians.[17]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Iwatsuki, Y.; Russell, B.; Pollard, D. & Carpenter, K.E. (2014). "Acanthopagrus australis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2014: e.T170257A1303135. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2014-3.RLTS.T170257A1303135.en. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b Australian Biological Resources Study (14 December 2012). "Species Acanthopagrus australis (Günther, 1859)". Australian Faunal Directory. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts, Australian Government. Archived from the original on 27 March 2016. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  3. ^ Hutchins & Swainston (1986), "Sea Fishes of Southern Australia", p. 62,
  4. ^ Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2014). "Acanthopagrus australis" in FishBase. November 2014 version.
  5. ^ Gomon, Martin F.; Bray, Dianne J. "Acanthopagrus". Fishes of Australia. Retrieved 25 April 2017.
  6. ^ Owen, Richard (1853). Descriptive Catalogue of the Osteological Series contained in the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of England. Vol. 1. London, United Kingdom: Taylor & Francis. p. 53.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Munro, Ian S. (1949). "Revision of Australian silver breams, Mylio and Rhabdosargus". Memoirs of the Queensland Museum. 12 (4): 182–223.
  8. ^ 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.
  9. ^ Troy, Jakelin (1993). The Sydney language. Canberra: Jakelin Troy. p. 53. ISBN 0-646-11015-2.
  10. ^ 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.
  11. ^ a b Industry, Investment NSW (2009). "Yellowfin bream" (PDF). Wild Fisheries Research Program. New South Wales Government. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h Roberts, Clive D.; Stewart, Andrew L. (2006). "FIRST RECORD OF YELLOWFIN BREAM ACANTHOPAGRUS AUSTRALIS (GÜNTHER) (TELEOSTEI; SPARIDAE) IN NEW ZEALAND WATERS". Records of the Auckland Museum. 43: 43–54. ISSN 1174-9202.
  13. ^ NSW Department of Primary Industries (2015). "Yellowfin Bream Acanthopagrus australis". Fishing and Aquaculture. NSW Government. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  14. ^ a b Bray, Dianne J. (2011). "Yellowfin Bream, Acanthopagrus australis (Günther 1859)". Fishes of Australia. Museum Victoria. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  15. ^ Pollock, B. R. (1985). "The reproductive cycle of yellowfin bream, Acanthopagms australis (Günther), with particular reference to protandrous sex inversion". Journal of Fish Biology. 26 (3): 301–11. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.1985.tb04269.x.
  16. ^ Brown, Gary (2011). How to Catch Australia's Favourite Saltwater Fish: Salmon, Tailor, Bream, Flathead, Kingfish, Leatherjacket, Luderick, Drummer, Mulloway, Snapper, Trevally, Whiting. Croydon, Victoria: Australian Fishing Network. pp. 19–20. ISBN 9781-8651-3179-5.
  17. ^ Attenbrow, Val (September 2009). "Aboriginal fishing in Port Jackson, and the Introduction of Shell Fish-hooks to Coastal New South Wales, Australia". In Daniel Lunney; Pat Hutchings; Dieter Hochuli (eds.). The Natural History of Sydney. p. 19. ISBN 9780980327236.

External links edit

  • Fishes of Australia : Acanthopagrus australis

acanthopagrus, australis, yellowfin, bream, also, known, bream, surf, bream, silver, bream, eastern, black, bream, species, marine, freshwater, fish, porgy, family, sparidae, deep, bodied, fish, occasionally, confused, with, acanthopagrus, butcheri, black, bre. Acanthopagrus australis the yellowfin bream also known as sea bream surf bream silver bream or eastern black bream is a species of marine and freshwater fish of the porgy family Sparidae It is a deep bodied fish occasionally confused with Acanthopagrus butcheri black bream but is generally distinguished by its yellowish ventral and anal fins 3 It is a popular target for recreational fishermen due to its capacity to fight well above its weight coupled with its table quality 4 Acanthopagrus australisConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ActinopterygiiOrder SpariformesFamily SparidaeGenus AcanthopagrusSpecies A australisBinomial nameAcanthopagrus australis Gunther 1859 Synonyms 2 Chrysophrys australis Gunther 1859Mylio australis Gunther 1859 Pagrus australis Gunther 1859 Sparus australis Gunther 1859 Roughleyia australis Gunther 1859 Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Breeding 5 Feeding 6 Commercial fishing 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy editA australis is one of 20 species in the genus Acanthopagrus part of the porgy family Sparidae 5 The species was first mentioned in scientific literature by Richard Owen in an 1853 work on skeletal material held by the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of England Although he named it Chrysophrys australis it was insufficiently described and hence designated a nomen nudum 6 German British naturalist Albert Gunther formally described the surf bream in 1859 using Owen s name Allan Riverstone McCulloch classified it in the genus Sparus in 1929 Texts up till 1949 used either of these binomial combinations 7 Ian Munro used the binomial name Mylio australis in a 1949 review of the Australian silver breams preferring Mylio over Acanthopagrus and Roughleya as he found it to be the oldest valid genus name available 7 However the validity of Mylio was questioned as its describer Philibert Commerson had listed the type as Sparus mylio Munro also 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 7 Acanthopagrus australis has a number of common names many of which are applied to a number of related fish species both in Australia and worldwide It was known as the sea bream or surf bream during the spawning season while black bream was a common name from New South Wales In Queensland it was known simply as bream Munro termed it the yellowfin bream 7 The Department of the Environment Water Heritage and the Arts of the Federal Government designated yellowfin bream as preferred name 2 It has also been designated the standard name by the CSIRO Division of Marine and Atmospheric Research in commercial fishing in Australia 8 Its name to the local Eora and Darug inhabitants of the Sydney basin has been transcribed as garuma karngooma caroom a and kururma 9 The species has also been known to hybridise with the closely related southern black bream 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 10 Description editThe yellowfin bream is a slower growing species than the related black bream 7 reaching a fork length of 23 cm 9 in in five years having matured when 22 cm 8 7 in long 11 The colour can be variable fish caught in freshwater may be bronze or brown coloured while those caught in estuarine or marine habitats are more silvery 7 A specimen measuring 56 cm 22 in long and weighing 7 pounds 3 ounces was caught in the Georges River and reported in 1928 while another even longer specimen from the Clarence River was 58 5 cm 23 in and 7 pounds 2 ounces 7 Distribution and habitat editYellowfin bream are found along the east coast of Australia from around 19 S to 38 S roughly from Townsville in northern Queensland to Mallacoota and the Gippsland Lakes region in eastern Victoria 7 A yellowfin bream specimen was first identified in New Zealand waters in Piwhane Spirits Bay in 1990 likely introduced by ship dispersal of juvenile fish 12 Due to the large amount of fishing around Northland and the lack of subsequent specimens it is unlikely that a population established 12 The bream inhabit estuaries in salt or brackish water up to the fresh water limit and inshore rocky reef habitats near ocean beaches and rocky headlands 13 12 Breeding editSurf bream come downstream to river mouths during spawning season typically winter 12 where they spawn and the females lay planktonic eggs These hatch after a few days and the young remain in the estuaries 14 Like other species of sparid fish the surf bream have a gonad termed the ovotestis that is made up of ovarian tissue dorsally and testicular tissue ventrally separated by connective tissue The species is protandrous male fish become female after the spawning season 15 The eggs hatch after 2 5 days after which they spend approximately four weeks as pelagic larvae 12 Larvae and juvenile fish live exclusively in seagrass beds in shallow estuaries 12 Feeding editCarnivorous the yellowfin bream is demersal preying on small fishes and invertebrates such as crabs shellfish polychaete worms and ascidians that dwell at the bottom of estuaries 14 12 They are fond of oysters and can be found around oyster farms 16 Commercial fishing editThe species is fished commercially predominantly in northern New South Wales and southern Queensland where it is one of the most commonly caught fish 1 12 Fish are taken predominantly in autumn and winter in net and mesh traps Recreational anglers are thought to catch twice as many fish as commercial fishers 11 Remains of surf bream recovered from middens in New South Wales indicate it was eaten by indigenous Australians 17 References edit a b Iwatsuki Y Russell B Pollard D amp Carpenter K E 2014 Acanthopagrus australis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2014 e T170257A1303135 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2014 3 RLTS T170257A1303135 en Retrieved 20 November 2021 a b Australian Biological Resources Study 14 December 2012 Species Acanthopagrus australis Gunther 1859 Australian Faunal Directory Canberra Australian Capital Territory Department of the Environment Water Heritage and the Arts Australian Government Archived from the original on 27 March 2016 Retrieved 15 September 2015 Hutchins amp Swainston 1986 Sea Fishes of Southern Australia p 62 Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2014 Acanthopagrus australis in FishBase November 2014 version Gomon Martin F Bray Dianne J Acanthopagrus Fishes of Australia Retrieved 25 April 2017 Owen Richard 1853 Descriptive Catalogue of the Osteological Series contained in the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of England Vol 1 London United Kingdom Taylor amp Francis p 53 a b c d e f g h Munro Ian S 1949 Revision of Australian silver breams Mylio and Rhabdosargus Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 12 4 182 223 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 Troy Jakelin 1993 The Sydney language Canberra Jakelin Troy p 53 ISBN 0 646 11015 2 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 a b Industry Investment NSW 2009 Yellowfin bream PDF Wild Fisheries Research Program New South Wales Government Retrieved 17 September 2015 a b c d e f g h Roberts Clive D Stewart Andrew L 2006 FIRST RECORD OF YELLOWFIN BREAM ACANTHOPAGRUS AUSTRALIS GUNTHER TELEOSTEI SPARIDAE IN NEW ZEALAND WATERS Records of the Auckland Museum 43 43 54 ISSN 1174 9202 NSW Department of Primary Industries 2015 Yellowfin Bream Acanthopagrus australis Fishing and Aquaculture NSW Government Retrieved 14 September 2015 a b Bray Dianne J 2011 Yellowfin Bream Acanthopagrus australis Gunther 1859 Fishes of Australia Museum Victoria Retrieved 17 September 2015 Pollock B R 1985 The reproductive cycle of yellowfin bream Acanthopagms australis Gunther with particular reference to protandrous sex inversion Journal of Fish Biology 26 3 301 11 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8649 1985 tb04269 x Brown Gary 2011 How to Catch Australia s Favourite Saltwater Fish Salmon Tailor Bream Flathead Kingfish Leatherjacket Luderick Drummer Mulloway Snapper Trevally Whiting Croydon Victoria Australian Fishing Network pp 19 20 ISBN 9781 8651 3179 5 Attenbrow Val September 2009 Aboriginal fishing in Port Jackson and the Introduction of Shell Fish hooks to Coastal New South Wales Australia In Daniel Lunney Pat Hutchings Dieter Hochuli eds The Natural History of Sydney p 19 ISBN 9780980327236 External links editFishes of Australia Acanthopagrus australis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Acanthopagrus australis amp oldid 1190899479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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