Grunion

Grunion
Temporal range: Pleistocene to Present[1]
California grunion, Leuresthes tenuis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Atheriniformes
Family: Atherinopsidae
Genus: Leuresthes
Jordan & Gilbert, 1880
Species

L. tenuis, California grunion
L. sardinas, Gulf grunion

Grunion are two fish species of the genus Leuresthes: the California grunion, L. tenuis, and the Gulf grunion L. sardinas. They are sardine-sized teleost fish of the Atherinopsidae family of New World silversides, found only off the coast of California, USA, and Baja California, Mexico where the species is found on both the Pacific Ocean and Gulf of California coasts.

Grunion are known for their unusual mating ritual whereby at very high tides the females come up on to sandy beaches where they dig their tails into the sand to lay their eggs. The male then wraps himself around the female to deposit his sperm and for the next ten days the grunion eggs remain hidden in the sand. At the next set of high tides the eggs hatch and the young grunion are washed out to sea.

A related species the false grunion (Colpichthys regis) lives in the Gulf of California. Although the fish looks and acts similar, it does not have the same breeding method.

Contents

Natural history

Grunion were originally classified as part of the Atherinidae family of silversides but are now classified in the family Atherinopsidae, along with other New World silversides including the jacksmelt and topsmelt. The California grunion, Leuresthes tenuis, is found along the Pacific Coast from Point Conception, California, to Point Abreojos, Baja California. They are rarely found between San Francisco in the north and San Juanico Bay, Baja California, in the south. The Gulf grunion L. sardina is found along the coast of Baja California in the Gulf of California.

They are small, slender fish with bluish green backs, silvery sides and bellies. Their snouts are bluntly rounded and slippery. Silversides differ from true smelts of the family Osmeridae in that they lack the trout-like adipose fin. Inhabiting the nearshore waters from the surf to a depth of 60 feet (18 m), marking experiments indicate that they are non-migratory.

Young grunion grow rapidly and are about five inches long by the time they reach one year old and are ready to spawn. Adult fish normally range in size from 6 to 7 inches (15 – 17 cm) with a maximum recorded size of 8.5 inches (220 mm) (La Jolla Ca.,05-11-05(19 cm).

Average body lengths for males and females are 4.5 and 5.0 inches (11.5 and 12.7 cm) respectively at the end of one year, 5.5 and 5.8 inches (14.0 and 14.7 cm) at the end of two years, and 5.9 to 6.3 inches (15.0 to 16.0 cm) at the end of three years.

The normal life span of the grunion is three to four years although individuals up to five years old have been found. Their growth rate slows after the first spawning and stops completely during the spawning season. Consequently, adult fish grow only during the fall and winter. This growth rate variation causes annuli to form on the scales, which have been used for aging purposes. The Gulf grunion, with its smaller eggs, is unique in that it may spawn during daytime.

California grunion spawn on beaches from two to six nights after the full and new moon beginning soon after high tide and continuing for several hours. As a wave breaks on the beach, the grunion swim as far up the slope as possible. The female arches her body whilst keeping her head up and excavates the semi-fluid sand with her tail. As her tail sinks, the female twists her body and digs tail first until she is buried up to her pectoral fins. After the female is in the nest, up to eight males attempt to mate with her by curving around the female and releasing their milt as she deposits her eggs about four inches below the surface. After spawning, the males immediately retreat toward the ocean. The milt flows down the female’s body until it reaches the eggs and fertilizes them. The female twists free and returns to the sea with the next wave. The whole event can happen in 30 seconds but some fish remain on the beach for several minutes. Spawning may continue from March through August, with occasional extensions into February and September. However, peak spawning is from late March through early June. Once mature, an individual may spawn during successive spawning periods at about 15-day intervals. Most females spawn about six times during the season. Counts of maturing ova to be laid at one spawning ranged from about 1,600 to about 3,600, with the larger females producing more eggs. A female might lay as many as 18,000 eggs over an entire season. The milt from the male might contain as many as one million sperm. Males may participate in several spawnings per run.

The eggs incubate a few inches deep in the sand above the level of subsequent waves. They are not immersed in seawater but are kept moist by the residual water in the sand. While incubating they are subject to predation by shore birds and sand-dwelling invertebrates. Under normal conditions they do not have an opportunity to hatch until the next tide series high enough reaches them 10 or more days later. Grunion eggs can extend incubation and delay hatching if tides do not reach them for an additional four weeks after this initial hatching time. Most of the eggs will hatch in 10 days if provided with seawater and the agitation of the rising surf. The mechanical action of the waves is the environmental trigger for hatching. The rapidity of hatching, which occurs in less than one minute, indicates that it is probably not an enzymatic function of a softening of the chorion as in some other fishes.

Grunion feeding habits are not well known. They have no teeth and feed on very small organisms such as plankton. In a laboratory setting grunion eat live brine shrimp. Humans, larger fish, and other animals prey upon grunion. An isopod, two species of flies, sandworms, and a beetle have been found preying on the eggs. Some shorebirds such as egrets and herons prey on grunion when the fish are on shore during spawning. Seagulls, sea lions and sand sharks have also been observed feeding on grunion during a grunion run. The reduction of spawning habitat due to beach erosion, harbor construction and pollution is believed to be the most critical problem facing the grunion species.

Status of the population

Despite local concentrations, the grunion is not an abundant species. While the population size is not known, all research points to a restricted resource that is adequately maintained at current harvest rates under existing regulations.

Grunion fishing

In the 1920s recreational fishing of grunion caused definite signs of depletion resulting in a regulation passed in 1927 that established a closed season of three months from April until June. Grunion stocks improved and in 1947 the closed season was shortened from April through to May. This closure is still in effect to protect grunion during their peak spawning period.

The periodic appearance of the grunion on Southern California beaches, and the act of catching them, is locally known as a "grunion run." A fishing license is required for persons 16 years and older to catch grunion and they may be taken by sport fishermen using their hands only. No appliances of any kind may be used to catch grunion, and no holes may be dug in the beach to entrap them. Grunion may be taken on specified dates between March and the end of August. There is no limit, but fishermen may take only what they can use, as under Californian law it is unlawful to waste fish.[2] With these regulations, the resource seems to be maintaining itself at a fairly constant level.

History

The coastal Indians in California harvested grunion during spawning runs. Archeologists have found fossil grunion otoliths (tiny, bonelike particles or stony platelike structures in the internal ear of lower vertebrates) at various Indian campsites.

Grunion were mentioned by Spanish explorer Juan Cabrillo in his ship's log dated c. 1542.

Scientists first identified grunion in San Francisco Bay in 1860.[3]

Grunion in popular culture

and the grunion ran again

through the oily sea

to plant eggs on shore and be caught

by unemployed drunks

with flopping canvas hats

and no woman at all.

References

  1. ^ Sepkoski, Jack (2002). "A compendium of fossil marine animal genera". Bulletins of American Paleontology 364: p.560. http://strata.ummp.lsa.umich.edu/jack/showgenera.php?taxon=611&rank=class. Retrieved 2007-12-25. 
  2. ^ "California Department of Fish & Game, Marine Region". California Department of Fish & Game. http://www.dfg.ca.gov/marine/gruschd.asp. Retrieved 2008-03-24. 
  3. ^ Ayres, Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci. (Ser. 1) v. 2)
  4. ^ "Bukowski: Variations on Us and Them". June 26, 1999. http://www.csudh.edu/dearhabermas/bukowski.htm. Retrieved February 6, 2011. 

Further reading

External links