Population dynamics and movements of Atlantic tarpon, Megalops atlanticus, in the Parnaíba Delta Protected Area, Brazil: challenges for local fishery management planning

Fishery management in Brazil has many challenges, including the engagement of fishers, building institutional (NGO, university, etc.) relationships to carry out research and provide key data for managers, and strengthening the capacity to articulate effective management strategies (policy institutio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental biology of fishes 2023-02, Vol.106 (2), p.449-468
Hauptverfasser: Fernandes, Cezar A. F., Cunha, Francisca E. A., Silva, Carlos E. L. S., Araújo, Alan C. S., Pereira, Rafael L., Viana, Daniel F., Magalhães, Werlanne M. S., Gondolo, M. A. P., de Castro, Daniel M. P., Adams, Aaron, Luo, Jiangang, Ault, Jerald S., Gondolo, Guilherme F.
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container_end_page 468
container_issue 2
container_start_page 449
container_title Environmental biology of fishes
container_volume 106
creator Fernandes, Cezar A. F.
Cunha, Francisca E. A.
Silva, Carlos E. L. S.
Araújo, Alan C. S.
Pereira, Rafael L.
Viana, Daniel F.
Magalhães, Werlanne M. S.
Gondolo, M. A. P.
de Castro, Daniel M. P.
Adams, Aaron
Luo, Jiangang
Ault, Jerald S.
Gondolo, Guilherme F.
description Fishery management in Brazil has many challenges, including the engagement of fishers, building institutional (NGO, university, etc.) relationships to carry out research and provide key data for managers, and strengthening the capacity to articulate effective management strategies (policy institution). Here we report on recent work to address some of these challenges for the Atlantic tarpon ( Megalops atlanticus ) fishery in the Parnaiba Delta Protected Area. These include meetings to create inter-sector communication, citizen science and ethnobiology to support data collection and biological sampling, satellite tagging to discern tarpon movements, and the first data-limited stock assessment. The research occurred between September 2018 and April 2020 in the Parnaíba Delta and adjacent marine area, specifically in the Canárias Islands (MA), Pedra do Sal (PI), and Bitupitá (CE). Gonadosomatic indices (GSI > 5%) of female tarpon suggested that tarpon migrate to the Parnaíba Delta to spawn in the dry season (July–December). These GSI findings corresponded with the ethnobiology results in which the fishers confirmed more intense fishing effort in the dry periods due in part to the added value of the gonads. Satellite-tagged tarpon remained close to the Buraco and Boca da Barra fishery areas, thus, close to the Parnaíba Delta region. The information collected here will enhance the collaborative formulation of an unprecedented management plan for the tarpon fishery in this region.
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subjects Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
Biological sampling
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Communication
Data collection
Dry season
Environment
Ethnobiology
Fisheries
Fisheries management
Fishers
Fishery management
Fishing
Fishing effort
Freshwater & Marine Ecology
Gonadosomatic index
Gonads
Life Sciences
Management planning
Marine environment
Megalopae
Megalops atlanticus
Nature Conservation
Population dynamics
Protected areas
Satellites
Stock assessment
Tagging
Zoology
title Population dynamics and movements of Atlantic tarpon, Megalops atlanticus, in the Parnaíba Delta Protected Area, Brazil: challenges for local fishery management planning
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