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Growth and Longevity of Hawaiian Grouper — Input for Management and Conservation

March 26, 2019

We study the life history of the Hawaiian grouper for information to aid in future management and conservation assessments.

Hawaiian grouper (Hyporthodus quernus) is endemic to the Hawaiian Islands and is regionally important, yet little is known about its life history.

This large species is managed within the Deep 7 bottomfish complex, which includes six snapper species that are assumed to have similar life history traits. Previous age estimates were not validated and suggested a maximum age of 34 years.

To evaluate the preliminary study and provide a valid basis for life history parameters, we aged otoliths using bomb radiocarbon (14C) dating. Measured 14C values provided ages for smallest to largest fish that differed from the original study.

The fundamental information provided here when evaluating Hawaiian grouper conservation status is longevity (valid to 50 years and estimated to 76 years) — no male sampled was <80 cm total length (TL) and younger than 34 years — and age-at-sexual maturity and age-at-sex change, which were indirectly estimated and compared with prior published estimates for this and other groupers.

Updated life history parameters (k = 0.078, L = 95.8 cm TL) should be used to improve future management and conservation assessments.


Andrews AH, DeMartini EE, Brodziak J, Nichols RS, Humphreys Jr RL. 2019. Growth and longevity of Hawaiian grouper (Hyporthodus quernus) — input for management and conservation of a large, slow-growing grouper. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences.  https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfas-2018-0170.

Last updated by Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center on 01/06/2022