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Longline Sampling Confirms Young Bluefin Tuna Spawn in the Slope Sea

December 5, 2025 — Atlantic bluefin tuna are prized by both recreational and commercial fishermen. In 2022 alone, U.S. commercial fishermen generated an estimated $12.4 million in revenue from harvesting bluefin tuna. However, they are also among the most challenging species to study, as they migrate long distances and live in the open ocean for much of the year.

NOAA Fisheries recently embarked on a cooperative research project to understand Atlantic bluefin tuna reproduction (also known as spawning) in the Slope Sea. Scientists infrequently sample this area of the ocean between the Gulf Stream and the continental shelf of the Northeast United States. It may contain a crucial missing piece for understanding the overall population structure of bluefin tuna in the Atlantic.

Historically, this species has been managed as having two primary stocks:

  • Eastern stock that spawns in the Mediterranean Sea
  • Western stock that spawns at older ages in the Gulf of America

Dr. Molly Lutcavage’s lab at the Large Pelagics Research Center in Gloucester, Massachusetts is conducting research on reproduction and electronic tagging. The lab is affiliated with UMass Dartmouth’s School for Marine Science & Technology. Their research suggested that spawning might be occurring in other areas of the western Atlantic as well, and by younger, smaller fish. Lutcavage’s lab predicted that smaller fish would spawn closer to feeding grounds. Biological evidence from NOAA Fisheries larval fish sampling in the Slope Sea supported this hypothesis. Recent genetic research shows the stocks are interconnected. However, there was little data available on the reproductive condition of adult bluefin tuna, including smaller adults, in the Slope Sea to corroborate these studies—until now.

Read the full article at NOAA Fisheries

Evidence Bolsters Classification of a Major Spawning Ground for Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Off the Northeast U.S.

March 4, 2022 — The Slope Sea off the Northeast United States is a major spawning ground for Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus), a new paper affirms. This finding likely has important implications for population dynamics and the survival of this fish, according to the paper, “Support for the Slope Sea as a major spawning ground for Atlantic bluefin tuna: evidence from larval abundance, growth rates, and particle-tracking simulations,” published in the Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences.

“Overall, our results provide important supporting evidence that the Slope Sea is a major spawning ground that is likely to be important for population dynamics,” the paper states. Spawning in the Slope Sea “may offer the species additional resilience in the face of both harvesting and climate change,” the paper adds.

The paper presents larval evidence supporting the recognition of the Slope Sea as a major spawning ground, including that larvae collected in the Slope Sea grew at the same rate as larvae collected in the Gulf of Mexico, indicating that this region is good larval habitat.

“In comparison to everything else we know about this species, the Slope Sea is a perfectly good place to be born as a larva,” said lead author Christina Hernández, who was a doctoral student in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) – Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) Joint Program in Oceanography/Applied Ocean Science and Engineering at the time of the study.

Read the full story at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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