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Populations of inshore serranids across the Canarian Archipelago: Relationships with human pressure and implications for conservation

We investigated spatio-temporal variability in the abundances and biomasses of four species of inshore serranids (the dusky grouper Ephinephelus marginatus, the island grouper Mycteroperca fusca, the painted comber Serranus scriba, and the blacktail comber S. atricauda) throughout the Canarian Archi...

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Published in:Biological conservation 2006-02, Vol.128 (1), p.13-24
Main Authors: Tuya, Fernando, Sanchez-Jerez, Pablo, Haroun, Ricardo J.
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Language:English
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description We investigated spatio-temporal variability in the abundances and biomasses of four species of inshore serranids (the dusky grouper Ephinephelus marginatus, the island grouper Mycteroperca fusca, the painted comber Serranus scriba, and the blacktail comber S. atricauda) throughout the Canarian Archipelago (central-east Atlantic Ocean) with underwater visual transects. By means of a multiscaled sampling design spanning three orders of magnitude of spatial variability (from 10 s of meters among replicated 100 m 2 transects to 100 s of kilometres among islands) and four sampling periods, we related differences in the distributions of serranids to differences in the degree of human pressure, such as fishing intensity and human population. Differences in human pressure among islands provide the most parsimonious explanation for many of the consistent inter-island differences in the abundance and biomass of the analyzed species. Larger-bodied serranids ( E. marginatus and M. fusca) are more vulnerable than the smaller species ( S. scriba and S. atricauda). In fact, the larger, more vulnerable species have been almost completely extirpated from the most intensely fished islands. Our results show that the larger groupers have been overexploited throughout the Canary Islands, and highlight the urgent need for stringent management measures and better control of littoral reef fish resources.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.biocon.2005.09.012
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source Elsevier:Jisc Collections:Elsevier Read and Publish Agreement 2022-2024:Freedom Collection (Reading list)
subjects Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Applied ecology
Biological and medical sciences
Canary Islands
Combers
Conservation, protection and management of environment and wildlife
Exploitation and management of natural biological resources (hunting, fishing and exploited populations survey, etc.)
Fishing pressure
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Groupers
Hierarchical design
Mycteroperca
Parks, reserves, wildlife conservation. Endangered species: population survey and restocking
Serranus scriba
title Populations of inshore serranids across the Canarian Archipelago: Relationships with human pressure and implications for conservation
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