A holistic and comprehensive data approach validates the distribution of the critically endangered flapper skate (Dipturus intermedius)

Author:

Garbett Amy1ORCID,Loca Sophie L.1ORCID,Barreau Thomas2,Biscoito Manuel34ORCID,Bradley Caroline5,Breen Joe6,Clarke Maurice7ORCID,Ellis Jim R.8,Griffiths Andrew M.9,Hannon Gary10,Jakobsdóttir Klara11ORCID,Junge Claudia12ORCID,Lynghammar Arve13ORCID,McCloskey Matthew1,Minos George14ORCID,Phillips Natasha D.1ORCID,Prodöhl Paulo A.5ORCID,Roche William15,Iglésias Samuel P.16ORCID,Thorburn James1ORCID,Collins Patrick C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Queen's University Marine Laboratory Newtownards UK

2. Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle Paris France

3. Funchal Natural History Museum Funchal Portugal

4. Observatório Oceânico da Madeira Funchal Portugal

5. Queen's University Belfast School of Biological Sciences Belfast UK

6. The Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA) Belfast UK

7. Marine Institute Oranmore Ireland

8. Centre for Environment Fisheries and Aquaculture Science Lowestoft UK

9. University of Exeter Exeter UK

10. Sea‐Fisheries Protection Authority National Seafood Centre Clonakilty Ireland

11. Marine and Freshwater Research Institute Reykjavík Iceland

12. Havforskningsinstituttet (Institute of Marine Research) Stakkevollan Tromsø Norway

13. The Arctic University of Norway Tromsø Norway

14. International Hellenic University Thessaloniki Greece

15. Inland Fisheries Ireland Dublin Ireland

16. Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle Concarneau France

Abstract

AbstractMorphological similarities between skates of the genus Dipturus in the north‐eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean have resulted in longstanding confusion, misidentification and misreporting. Current evidence indicates that the common skate is best explained as two species, the flapper skate (Dipturus intermedius) and the common blue skate (D. batis). However, some management and conservation initiatives developed prior to the separation continue to refer to common skate (as ‘D. batis’). This taxonomic uncertainty can lead to errors in estimating population viability, distribution range, and impact on fisheries management and conservation status. Here, we demonstrate how a concerted taxonomic approach, using molecular data and a combination of survey, angler and fisheries data, in addition to expert witness statements, can be used to build a higher resolution picture of the current distribution of D. intermedius. Collated data indicate that flapper skate has a more constrained distribution compared to the perceived distribution of the ‘common skate’, with most observations recorded from Norway and the western and northern seaboards of Ireland and Scotland, with occasional specimens from Portugal and the Azores. Overall, the revised spatial distribution of D. intermedius has significantly reduced the extant range of the species, indicating a possibly fragmented distribution range.

Funder

Interreg

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference86 articles.

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3. Resolving the spatial distributions of Dipturus intermedius and Dipturus batis—the two taxa formerly known as the ‘common skate’

4. Resolving the spatial distributions of Dipturus intermedius and Dipturus batis—the two taxa formerly known as the ‘common skate’

5. Resolving taxonomic uncertainty in vulnerable elasmobranchs: are the Madeira skate (Raja maderensis) and the thornback ray (Raja clavata) distinct species?

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