“…McBride (2015) used a sample size of 5 fish to produce 5 age estimates per age class, a sample size that like those in most studies is much smaller than the sample sizes used in our study. For example, other studies have used sample sizes of 85-180 per species when comparing aging struc tures (Khan and Khan, 2009;Khan et al, 2015;Baudouin et al, 2016;Kumbar and Lad, 2016), 14-390 per species when comparing ages between readers (Wakefield et al, 2017;Khan et al, 2019), and 30-182 per species when comparing both aging methods and ages between readers (Gürsoy et al, 2005;Goldman and Musick, 2006;Herbst and Marsden, 2011). Given these smaller sample sizes, comparing age estimates from our study to those from the other studies has been difficult.…”