Coryphaenidae: F II A4

Coryphaena hippurus Linnaeus, 1758.

dorado

Egg diameter in µm

Number of oil globules

Diameter of oil globule in µm

Yolk texture

Perivitelline space

Position of oil globule at hatch

Gut length   at eye- pigment stage

Myomeres

1320-1560

1

265-340

segmented

narrow

stern

59% of NL

30

Egg: The light amber oil globule and exaggerated segmentation of the yolk usually identify this species.   Fine yellow and black pigment dots are evenly distributed on the embryo, the black spots becoming stellate on the head.  Incubation is about 50 hours (25°C).

Larva: The NH larva has unpigmented eyes and an unformed mouth. Greenish/yellow pigment lines the finfold edge (C), becoming whiter as the larva develops (E & F).  By day 6 it is fading. C: NH, D: 1 day, E: 2 days, F: 4 days, G: 6 days (25°C).

No effort was made to rear this species as the eggs are well illustrated in the literature (eg Ikeda & Mito 1988, pg 1047). Note however, that Shao et. al. (2001) show two larvae under this species, which appear to be two stages of a monodactylid ( their Plates B & C pg 76), while what appears to be the early larva of  C. hippurus is shown on page 57 (Plate B) as a gurnard. Three hatched larva has been barcoded, matching 5 locally collected adults (BOLD), as well as a larva found drifting into the Illovo estuary on an incoming tide.

Linked samples

Offshore

Inshore

Eggs

249

58

Hits

98

35

Dorado are summer visitors to KZN waters, and spawn while in our waters (blue graph). This is in contrast to Scomberomorus commerson, which moves into our waters over the same period, but does not spawn here (van der Elst 1981). The annual catch of eggs at Park Rynie, showed a marked increase from 1998-2004, but has since dropped (white graph). The Park Rynie linked samples had 81% offshore, indicating spawning around the 50m contour. See Section 7.3 and Table 1 of the Introductory Notes, for more information on the linked samples.