“We present unequivocal evidence that Atlantic bluefin tuna
spawn in the Slope Sea, counter to the current assumption that the Gulf of
Mexico and Mediterranean Sea are the exclusive spawning grounds. We also demonstrate that the age at maturity
of western bluefin tuna is currently overestimated, that this stock exhibits
size-structured spawning migrations, and that migratory connections exist between
western and eastern Atlantic spawning grounds…The implications of our work are
most pronounced for western Atlantic bluefin tuna, which have a life history
less vulnerable to overexploitation and extinction than is currently estimated.”
The researchers’ conclusions were based on the presence of
bluefin tuna larvae in a region known as the “Slope Sea,” an area at
the edge of the continental shelf east of the southern New England and upper
mid-Atlantic states, as such larvae were too small and too young to have
drifted from known Gulf of Mexico spawning grounds.
The presence of the larvae led scientists to question the estimated
age at maturity for bluefin tuna.
For many years, no bluefin less than nine years of age were
found to be spawning in the Gulf of Mexico, and electronic tagging data
confirmed that such large bluefin migrated from maritime Canada and New England
down to the Gulf in order to spawn. Biologists
thus assumed that western stock bluefin did not mature until they were at least
nine years old, which was a stark contrast to eastern stock fish, where 50% of
the population was believed to be mature when just four years of age.
The discovery of bluefin tuna larvae in the Slope Sea,
combined with electronic tagging data and three different lines of biological
evidence relating to bluefin reproduction, led the researchers to conclude that
tuna as young as five years of age were spawning there. They calculated that, based on conditions
that existed when the research was done, more than half of all western Atlantic
bluefin tuna reproduction took place in the Slope Sea, and not in the Gulf of
Mexico.
Those findings had implications for the western Atlantic
bluefin tuna fishery, for if correct, they would allow biologists to use a
lower average age at maturity in their calculations, which would likely
increase estimates of both spawning stock biomass and the level of landings
that such increased biomass could sustainably support.
The
2016 paper seemed to represent a real breakthrough in bluefin tuna science, but
it initially led to substantial controversy. Dr. Barbara Block, a biologist who has done
substantial research on bluefin tuna, called the research “interesting,” but said
that she needed more evidence, including seeing sexually mature bluefin in the
Slope Sea, before she could agree that younger, but still mature, bluefin were
spawning there.
Others went further.
“New science and new information is good. What one has to be careful of is attempting
to manage the Atlantic bluefin population from a single study. The situation is always complex.”
Contrary to those who believed that a younger age at
maturity would allow a larger annual harvest, Dr. Boustany noted that
“If we’re trying to rebuild the population during a certain
time frame, than we might need to actually reduce the amount of fish we’re
catching now.”
Thus, it would be safe to say that, when the paper was first
released, people had a lot of questions,
and many were unwilling to accept its conclusions. The debate went on for nearly a decade, but
over time, after additional research was published, the claim that bluefin tuna
spawned in the Slope Sea became more and more accepted.
“The collections of Atlantic bluefin tuna larvae in the Slope
Sea in 2016, together with the otolith analysis and particle tracking analysis
that they enabled, support the conclusion that the conditions in the Slope Sea
are suitable for their growth and retention, and that they originated from
spawning within the Slope Sea.”
However, the 2021 paper limited its conclusions to the
origins, distribution, and mean abundance of bluefin tuna larvae collected in
the Slope Sea. It did not address
questions such as the size and/or origin of the adults spawning in that
location, or the relative contribution that the Slope Sea spawners make to the
overall western Atlantic bluefin stock, compared to fish spawning in the Gulf
of Mexico and elsewhere, but only noted that the presence of a Slope Sea
spawning ground “may” contribute to the resilience of the stock.
The authors acknowledged that
“An important open question is the abundance, distribution,
and identity of the spawning adults in the Slope Sea. How many adults are spawning there, and do they
consistently utilize the suitable habitat…Are they western individuals that
mature earlier than previously understood, or is there significant stock mixing
occurring between eastern and western individuals?...”
“Our findings complement the larval analyses of [the papers
published in 2016 and 2021], providing detailed behavioural data for the adult
spawners that these [papers] inferred were present. However, most of the spawners we identified
were >10 years old…and, therefore, these results to not support [the 2016
paper’s] hypothesis that the [Slope Sea] is primarily a spawning ground
for smaller individuals, nor do they support the argument for a lower age at
maturity…Although our tagging is biased toward larger individuals, between 1996
and 2020 we added tracks for 123 fish tagged in the west at <10 years old,
of which 73 extended into June the following year…A total of seven of the 73
were classified as [Slope Sea] spawners, the same as the proportion across the entire
dataset. Furthermore with the identified
[Slope Sea spawners comprising only [about] 12% of [North Carolina]-tagged fish
(and [about] 6% of those tagged in the [Gulf of St. Lawrence]), we do not find
support for the contention that the [Slope Sea] spawning ground may be
responsible for a more significant portion of western spawning than the [Gulf
of Mexico].”
So, by 2023, biologists were beginning to build a consensus
that the Slope Sea was definitely a spawning ground for bluefin tuna, but had
not come to agreement on its importance, nor on the size or origin of the tuna
spawning there.
Finally,
on December 4, 2025, NMFS issued a press release announcing that
“Longline Sampling Confirms Young Bluefin Tuna Spawn in the
Slope Sea.”
The release went on to describe NMFS researchers making two
trips to the Slope Sea in the summer of 2025.
The purpose of the first trip was to sample bluefin caught on commercial
longlines. The samples taken appear to
confirm that younger bluefin tuna are, in fact, spawning in the Slope Sea.
Scientists sampled 90 bluefin tuna—42 females and 48 males—ranging
in size from 38 to 110 inches, with an average length of 72 inches, and
“observed multiple reproductive statuses associated with
spawning,”
although those visual observations will be confirmed through
further laboratory study.
The
second trip to the Slope Sea collected thousands of bluefin tuna larvae. As NMFS explained,
“The team is using genetic information across life history
stages—from larvae to adults—to examine kinship, or the relationships between
different fish. They are using a
technique called close-kin mark-recapture.
They’re also looking at how much mixing is occurring between the eastern
and western Atlantic stocks.
“Analyzing these relationships will help us better estimate
population size and resolve the 40-year-old mystery of tuna stock mixing in the
West Atlantic.”
Some of the initial results of the new NMFS research were presented
and discussed at the
2025 meeting of the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic
Tunas, which occurred in late November, where a modest increase in the western
Atlantic bluefin tuna harvest was approved.
The recent NMFS research largely confirms the conclusions
reached in the original 2016 paper which announced the discovery of a new
bluefin tuna spawning ground in the Slope Sea, which is utilized by bluefin
notably smaller than those which spawn in the Gulf of Mexico.
There are still some questions that need to be answered, but
the history of Slope Sea bluefin research, from the initial paper published in
2016 to the latest NMFS research, provides a good example of how fisheries
science is developed, how it progresses and, most recently, how such science is
used.
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