Triglidae: L II B5
Lepidotrigla faurei Gilghrist & Thompson , 1914.
Prickly gurnard







|
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 |
|
920-1320 |
1 |
230-265 |
clear |
narrow |
stern |
38% of NL |
32 |
Egg: This egg has a wide size range, and may prove to be 2 (or more) species. In its size range, after about 24 hours incubation (A), the egg can be separated, on white background, from a host of sparids, sciaenids and especially Scomber (LIIA7), by the presence of fine black dots scattered on the yolk, precursors to the stellate lemon yellow spots that develop later (A1). At 24 hours, the embryo is covered in fine yellow and black spots. The chorion has a pattern of fine dots, best seen on the discarded shell after the larva has hatched (B). The oil globule is initially pink, becoming light amber. Incubation takes 40-50 hours, depending on time of year (and therefore, temperature).
Larva: The big stellate lemon yellow pigment pattern of the early larva (C) is quickly lost, except for the finfold edge and large, mustard-yellow, darker-edged pectorals, which along with the large mouth (D), easily identify this species. There is often a black spot on the tip of the lower jaw. At 15 days the larva is still preflexion (F). C: 1 day, D: 5 days, E: 6 days, F: 15 days (25°C).
Despite many attempts, I was only able to take this species past first-feeding once, and then only to 15 days. The upper limit of egg size agrees well with a triglid egg illustrated by Brownell (1979), which he assigned to Cheilidonichthys capensis (Cuvier 1829), using the earlier name Trigla capensis, but 5 adults of capensis, from the Agulhas Bank, and 1 from KZN waters, do not match the barcode of 7 hatched larvae . These match the barcodes of 3 locally collected Lepidotrigla faurei (BOLD reference).
Initially I divided the species into two based on egg size (1100-1200µm and ca1000µm), but 5 larva from the larger egg group, and 2 from the smaller egg group have all yielded essentially the same sequence (BOLD).


| Linked samples | Offshore | Inshore |
| Eggs | 752 | 301 |
| Hits | 108 | 78 |
This species was common off Park Rynie, spawning all year round, with a slight winter to early summer maximum (blue graph). The egg only appeared twice in the DHM samples, in August and October. Off Park Rynie, the annual catch has been fairly steady, with no particular trend (white graph). The Park Rynie linked samples had more eggs offshore (71%), but the percentage is below the two indicator species, indicating spawning on and about the 30m contour. See Section 7.3 and Table 1 of the Introductory Notes, for more information on the linked samples.