Predictions & Data for this entry
| Model: std | climate: MA | migrate: | phylum: |
| COMPLETE = 1.5 | ecozone: MA | food: bjPz, jiCi | class: |
| MRE = 0.026 | habitat: 0jMp, jiMr | gender: D | order: |
| SMSE = 0.002 | embryo: Mp | reprod: O | family: |
Zero-variate data
| Data | Observed | Predicted | (RE) | Unit | Description | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ab | 1.5 | 1.467 | (0.02214) | d | age at birth | guess |
| am | 5475 | 5475 | (1.081e-05) | d | life span | guess |
| Lb | 0.2 | 0.2032 | (0.01579) | cm | total length at birth | guess |
| Lp | 14.6 | 14.56 | (0.002808) | cm | total length at puberty | ShinoHazi2007 |
| Li | 61 | 59.84 | (0.01908) | cm | ultimate total length | fishbase |
| Wwi | 2408 | 2369 | (0.01627) | g | ultimate wet weight | ShinoHazi2007 |
| Ri | 684.6 | 697.4 | (0.01875) | #/d | maximum reprod rate | ShinoHazi2007 |
| rB | 0.002575 | 0.002293 | (0.1098) | 1/d | von Bert growth rate | fishbase |
Pseudo-data at Tref = 20°C
| Data | Generalised animal | Holocentrus adscensionis | Unit | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| v | 0.02 | 0.04622 | cm/d | energy conductance |
| kap | 0.8 | 0.9945 | - | allocation fraction to soma |
| kap_R | 0.95 | 0.95 | - | reproduction efficiency |
| p_M | 18 | 61.17 | J/d.cm^3 | vol-spec som maint |
| k_J | 0.002 | 0.002 | 1/d | maturity maint rate coefficient |
| kap_G | 0.8 | 0.8014 | - | growth efficiency |
Discussion
- Author_mod_1: I found information on the number of eggs per female as a function of length in Anon2013 that was much higher than in Anon2015 but chose to not include it as the temperature was not provided
- Author_mod_1: I was surprised to observe that the weights coefficient for ab changed so much the parameter values
Facts
- EW = 0.9011 * TW + 1.8591, eviscerated and total weight in g (females); EW = 0.0948 * FL ^2.4673, eviscerated weight (g), fork length for females (cm) (Ref: ShinoHazi2007)
- Occurs in shallow coral reefs, as well as deeper offshore waters. A nocturnal species, hiding in deep crevices or under coral edges during the day; at night it usually moves over sand and grass beds, taking mainly crabs and other small crustaceans (Ref. 3634). Capable of producing sounds. (Ref: fishbase)
Bibliography