Most Atlantic menhaden reach sexual maturity during their third year of life (late age 2) at lengths of 180 - 230 mm fork length (FL). Spawning occurs year-round throughout much of the species' range, with maximum spawning off the North Carolina coast during late fall and winter. Adults then move inshore and northward in spring and stratify by age and size along the Atlantic coast. During this northern migration, spawning occurs progressively closer inshore and by late spring, some spawning occurs within coastal embayments. There are definite spring and fall spawning peaks in the Middle and North Atlantic Regions, with some spawning occurring during the winter in the shelf waters of the Mid-Atlantic Region.
Atlantic menhaden are relatively prolific spawners. Predicted fecundities range from 38,000 eggs for a small female (180 mm FL) to 362,000 for a large female (330 mm FL).
Analysis of eggs and larvae collected at various locations along the Atlantic coast during 1953-75 generally confirmed earlier knowledge of spawning times and locations based on observations of adults with maturing or spent ovaries. During December-March, most spawning-age fish congregate in offshore waters south of Cape Hatteras. Maximum spawning probably occurs at this time. Maximum spawning may occur off North Carolina during periods of strong northeast winds in up-welled water near the western edge of the Gulf Stream. Spawning continues at a decreasing rate closer inshore as fish migrate north in late March. By May, most spawning is restricted to coastal waters north of Cape Hatteras . Spawning reaches a minimum in June, but continues at a low level until September north of Long Island. As mature fish migrate south in October, spawning increases from Long Island to Virginia.
The capture of a 138 mm juvenile Atlantic menhaden in an estuary on the Maine coast in October 1990 suggests that a limited amount of spawning may occur as far north as the Gulf of Maine. Some ripening female menhaden were offloaded on to the Soviet processing ship near Portland, Maine in August and September 1991. Egg and larval surveys have been restricted to waters south of Cape Cod and, thus, would not have produced any evidence for spawning in the Gulf of Maine.
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