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A comparison of the growth and development of pyjama sharks (Poroderma africanum) in wild and captive populations

Version 2 2025-10-08, 04:50
Version 1 2025-10-07, 04:59
journal contribution
posted on 2025-10-08, 04:50 authored by I Kiyatake, Thomas Luke JohnsonThomas Luke Johnson, E Cottrant, Y Kitadani, K Onda, M Murata, NJ Drobniewska, TG Paulet, K Nishida
AbstractThe pyjama shark (Poroderma africanum) is a Scyliorhinid species endemic to South Africa. Even though it is kept in captivity in many aquaria, there is a lack of research on its growth and development. In this study, we investigated the fertilization rate of eggs and the age at female sexual maturation in captive sharks and compared their growth to that of wild individuals. This is the first study to compare the growth of captive and wild catsharks as well as the first study to compare growth in male and female pyjama sharks and benefits from a much larger sample size than has previously been collected. The mean incubation rate (±standard error of the mean [SE]) was 239.46 ± 4.97 days, the mean Lt of hatchlings (±SE) was 14.65 ± 0.24 cm, and the mean Wt (±SE) was 17.19 ± 0.75 g. The observed ratio of male to female offspring (1:3.5) was also significantly different from 1:1. One female laid fertilized eggs 6.6 years after hatching and was considered sexually mature. Both in captivity and in the wild, males showed negative allometric growth and females showed isometric growth. The growth performance (Φ') was also greater in captive sharks compared to wild sharks regardless of sex. However, there was significant variation in growth between individuals of the same sex. The similar growth patterns (i.e., allometry and isometry) found in wild and captive populations are a very useful tool for informing future conservation management if the population of this shark species were to decline in the future and also prove that captive studies for this species are transferable to wild populations with regard to sexual differences. This study also provides a benchmark for further captive studies in other lesser‐studied catshark species and raises interesting questions concerning sexual differences in growth for other shark species.

Funding

We express our deepest gratitude to Dr. Brian Kot of City University of Hong Kong for his help in translating the figure captions into English in this paper. Furthermore, we thank Dr. Enrico Gennari of Oceans Research Institute for advising on information related to the growth of captive individuals, and we thank the staff at Osaka Aquarium Kaiyukan for their cooperation in conducting this survey. We also thank Jacob Johnson and Sadie Simpson for aiding in the development of the adapted Phi-Munro equation. Finally, we thank Laila Rouhani, as well as all previous interns and volunteers of SASC who helped with data collection.

Funder: We express our deepest gratitude to Dr. Brian Kot of City University of Hong Kong for his help in translating the figure captions into English in this paper. Furthermore, we thank Dr. Enrico Gennari of Oceans Research Institute for advising on information

History

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  1. 1.

Location

England

Open access

  • No

Language

eng

Journal

Journal of Fish Biology

Volume

103

Pagination

1515-1525

ISSN

0022-1112

eISSN

1095-8649

Issue

6

Publisher

Wiley