Age Readings and Assessment in Coastal Batoid Elasmobranchs from Small-Scale Size-Selective Fishery: The Importance of Data Comparability in Multi-Specific Assemblages

Author:

Scacco Umberto12ORCID,Zanardi Fabiana2,Kroha Silvio3ORCID,Mancini Emanuele456,Tiralongo Francesco78ORCID,Nascetti Giuseppe2

Affiliation:

1. Italian Institute for Environmental Protection and Research, ISPRA (ISPRA), National Centre of Laboratories, Biology (CN-LAB-BIO), 00128 Rome, Italy

2. Department of Marine Eco-Biology (DEBM), University of Tuscia, 01100 Viterbo, Italy

3. Department of Science, University of ‘Rome 3’, Viale Guglielmo Marconi, 00146 Rome, Italy

4. Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences and Technologies, DiSTeBA, University of Salento, 73100 Lecce, Italy

5. National Biodiversity Future Center (NBFC), 90100 Palermo, Italy

6. Ente Fauna Marina Mediterranea—Scientific Organization for Research and Conservation of Marine Biodiversity, 96012 Avola, Italy

7. Department of Biological, Geological and Environmental Sciences, University of Catania, 95124 Catania, Italy

8. National Research Council, Institute of Marine Biological Resources and Biotechnologies, 60125 Ancona, Italy

Abstract

The large variation in vertebral shape and calcification observed among elasmobranch species prevents using a single method for enhancing growth bands and reading age. Further, estimating age and growth parameters can be difficult or impractical when samples are incomplete due to the bycatch of a size-selective fishery. Using a single and rapid method, age readings were obtained on the vertebrae of four batoid species, namely 53 individuals of Dasyatis pastinaca, 51 of Raja asterias, 15 of Torpedo marmorata, and 55 specimens of Torpedo torpedo, from the local small-scale trammel net fishery in the coastal waters (5–20 m depth) of the Central Tyrrhenian Sea during 2019–2021. Based on these data, a statistical routine was developed to obtain multiple estimates of age and growth parameters for incomplete samples due to size-selective fishing. The acceptable agreement between and within readers (intra and inter-reader disagreement < 5%) and the rate of increase in vertebral size with body size (differently ranked across species) demonstrated the consistency of the enhancing method. The parameters estimated by the Von Bertalanffy and Gompertz growth models matched the data available in the Mediterranean Sea for the species studied, with D. pastinaca, T. torpedo, and R. asterias showing the lowest (k = 0.05–0.12), intermediate (k = 0.112–0.19), and highest (k = 0.18–0.23) growth rates, respectively, in line with the life history traits of these species. Overall, the method proved effective both in delineating band pairs in vertebrae of different species and in reliably estimating the age and growth parameters of problematic samples due to size-selective fishing. The proposed method supports the collection of comparable demographic data from other areas where similar multi-specific assemblages are bycatch of size-selective fisheries impacting potential nursery areas and other essential habitats for elasmobranchs.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference99 articles.

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