99 research outputs found
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A Collaborative Research Framework to Collect Data for the Understanding of Coastal and Marine Ecosystems and Fisheries
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Advanced Acoustic Technologies for the Monitoring and Management of Sustainable Fisheries: A Practice Manual
The shallow-water fish assemblage of Isla del Coco National Park, Costa Rica: structure and patterns in an isolated, predator-dominated ecosystem
18 páginas, 7 figuras, 5 tablas[EN]Fishes at Isla del Coco National Park, Costa Rica, were surveyed as part of a larger scientific expedition
to the area in September 2009. The average total biomass of nearshore fishes was 7.8 tonnes per ha, among
the largest observed in the tropics, with apex predators such as sharks, jacks, and groupers accounting for nearly
40% of the total biomass. The abundance of reef and pelagic sharks, particularly large aggregations of threatened
species such as the scalloped hammerhead shark (up to 42 hammerheads ha-1) and large schools of jacks and
snappers show the capacity for high biomass in unfished ecosystems in the Eastern Tropical Pacific. However,
the abundance of hammerhead and reef whitetip sharks appears to have been declining since the late 1990s, and
likely causes may include increasing fishing pressure on sharks in the region and illegal fishing inside the Park.
One Galapagos shark tagged on September 20, 2009 in the Isla del Coco National Park moved 255km southeast
towards Malpelo Island in Colombia, when it stopped transmitting. These results contribute to the evidence that
sharks conduct large-scale movements between marine protected areas (Isla del Coco, Malpelo, Galápagos)
in the Eastern tropical Pacific and emphasize the need for regional-scale management. More than half of the
species and 90% of the individuals observed were endemic to the tropical eastern Pacific. These high biomass
and endemicity values highlight the uniqueness of the fish assemblage at Isla del Coco and its importance as
a global biodiversity hotspot.[ES]La biomasa promedio de peces costeros en el Parque
Nacional Isla del Coco en septiembre de 2010 fue de 7,8
toneladas por hectárea, entre las más elevadas halladas
jamás en zonas tropicales. Los grandes depredadores
representaron el 40% de la biomasa total. La abundancia de
tiburones costeros y pelágicos, particularmente las enormes
agregaciones de tiburón martillo (hasta 42 individuos por
hectárea) y los extensos bancos de carángidos y lutjánidos,
muestran la capacidad que tienen los ecosistemas marinos
no pescados para albergar elevadas biomasas de peces, y
hacen de la Isla del Coco un lugar único en el mundo. No
obstante, la abundancia de tiburones parece estar decreciendo
desde 1999, probablemente a causa de la creciente
presión pesquera en la región y la pesca ilegal en el interior
del Parque. Un tiburón de Galápagos marcado se dirigió
255km en dirección a la Isla de Malpelo, Colombia. Estos
resultados sugieren que los tiburones realizan importantes
movimientos entre áreas marinas protegidas (Isla del Coco,
Malpelo, Galápagos) en el Pacífico Tropical Oriental y
remarcan la necesidad de una gestión regional de estos animales.
Más del 50% de las especies y el 90% de individuos
observados en los contajes eran endémicos del Pacífico
Tropical Oriental.Peer reviewe
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Patrones Espaciales y Temporales de las Principales Actividades Pesqueras en Dos Cumunidades del Alto Golfo de California, Mex.
A framework to assess the health of rocky reefs linking geomorphology, community assemblage, and fish biomass
The recovery of historic community assemblages on reefs is a primary objective for the management of marine ecosystems. Working under the overall hypothesis that, as fishing pressure increases, the abundance in upper trophic levels decreases followed by intermediate levels, we develop an index that characterizes the comparative health of rocky reefs. Using underwater visual transects to sample rocky reefs in the Gulf of California, Mexico, we sampled 147 reefs across 1200 km to test this reef health index (IRH). Five-indicators described 88% of the variation among the reefs along this fishing-intensity gradient: the biomass of piscivores and carnivores were positively associated with reef health; while the relative abundances of zooplanktivores, sea stars, and sea urchins, were negatively correlated with degraded reefs health. The average size of commercial macro-invertebrates and the absolute fish biomass increased significantly with increasing values of the IRH. Higher total fish biomass was found on reefs with complex geomorphology compared to reefs with simple geomorphology (r2 = 0.14, F = 44.05, P \u3c 0.0001) and the trophic biomass pyramid also changed, which supports the evidence of the inversion of biomass pyramids along the gradient of reefs\u27 health. Our findings introduce a novel approach to classify the health of rocky reefs under different fishing regimes and therefore resultant community structures. Additionally, our IRH provides insight regarding the potential gains in total fish biomass that may result from the conservation and protection of reefs with more complex geomorphology
Asymmetric connectivity of spawning aggregations of a commercially important marine fish using a multidisciplinary approach
Understanding patterns of larval dispersal is key in determining whether no-take marine reserves are self-sustaining, what will be protected inside reserves and where the benefits of reserves will be observed. We followed a multidisciplinary approach that merged detailed descriptions of fishing zones and spawning time at 17 sites distributed in the Midriff Island region of the Gulf of California with a biophysical oceanographic model that simulated larval transport at Pelagic Larval Duration (PLD) 14, 21 and 28 days for the most common and targeted predatory reef fish, (leopard grouper Mycteroperca rosacea). We tested the hypothesis that source–sink larval metapopulation dynamics describing the direction and frequency of larval dispersal according to an oceanographic model can help to explain empirical genetic data. We described modeled metapopulation dynamics using graph theory and employed empirical sequence data from a subset of 11 sites at two mitochondrial genes to verify the model predictions based on patterns of genetic diversity within sites and genetic structure between sites. We employed a population graph describing a network of genetic relationships among sites and contrasted it against modeled networks. While our results failed to explain genetic diversity within sites, they confirmed that ocean models summarized via graph and adjacency distances over modeled networks can explain seemingly chaotic patterns of genetic structure between sites. Empirical and modeled networks showed significant similarities in the clustering coefficients of each site and adjacency matrices between sites. Most of the connectivity patterns observed towards downstream sites (Sonora coast) were strictly asymmetric, while those between upstream sites (Baja and the Midriffs) were symmetric. The best-supported gene flow model and analyses of modularity of the modeled networks confirmed a pulse of larvae from the Baja Peninsula, across the Midriff Island region and towards the Sonoran coastline that acts like a larval sink, in agreement with the cyclonic gyre (anti-clockwise) present at the peak of spawning (May–June). Our approach provided a mechanistic explanation of the location of fishing zones: most of the largest areas where fishing takes place seem to be sustained simultaneously by high levels of local retention, contribution of larvae from upstream sites and oceanographic patterns that concentrate larval density from all over the region. The general asymmetry in marine connectivity observed highlights that benefits from reserves are biased towards particular directions, that no-take areas need to be located upstream of targeted fishing zones, and that some fishing localities might not directly benefit from avoiding fishing within reserves located adjacent to their communities. We discuss the implications of marine connectivity for the current network of marine protected areas and no-take zones, and identify ways of improving it
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