2007
DOI: 10.1007/s10228-007-0406-2
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Sexual size dimorphism, growth, and maturity of the fluvial eight-barbel loach in the Kako River, Japan

Abstract: The maturation and growth pattern of the fl uvial eight-barbel loach Lefua sp. (Japanese name: nagare-hotoke-dojo), an endangered species, was investigated using an individual identifi cation-recapture method from 1995 to 1998 in an upper reach of a headwater tributary of the Kako River, Hyogo Prefecture, Japan. Based on observations of the gonads through the abdominal skin, the loach was estimated to breed mostly from May to July. All the males matured by age 1 + , and all the females matured by age 2 + . Gam… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Data on balitorid reproduction are scarce: in temperate Asia, the Japanese balitorid Lefua sp. spawns once a year in the summer (May to July; Aoyama, 2007; Aoyama & Doi, 2006), which is similar to P. myersi . Seasonal changes in gonad development of the Indian balitorid Bhavania australis suggest that it might reproduce twice each year at the beginning and the end of monsoon season (Jacob & Suryanarayanan, 1990), although trends in the Gonado‐Somatic Index for this species indicate a single extended period of breeding throughout the monsoon (fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…Data on balitorid reproduction are scarce: in temperate Asia, the Japanese balitorid Lefua sp. spawns once a year in the summer (May to July; Aoyama, 2007; Aoyama & Doi, 2006), which is similar to P. myersi . Seasonal changes in gonad development of the Indian balitorid Bhavania australis suggest that it might reproduce twice each year at the beginning and the end of monsoon season (Jacob & Suryanarayanan, 1990), although trends in the Gonado‐Somatic Index for this species indicate a single extended period of breeding throughout the monsoon (fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…By contrast, Lefua sp. in Palaearctic Japan attains a similar size to P. myersi but may live for as long as 10 years, although breeding is possible at 1‐year old (Aoyama, 2007). We suspect that P. myersi is also capable of breeding after 1 year, and probably breeds twice during its life span, but this has yet to be confirmed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Meanwhile the breeding season of L. sp. is mostly from May to July (Aoyama & Doi 2006, Aoyama 2007 and it is just before or during the rainy season. Moving along substrate without floating in early stages of L. sp.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%