The bycatch of piramutaba, Brachyplatystoma vaillantii industrial fishing in a salinity and depth gradient in the Amazon estuary, Brazil

Author:

MARCENIUK Alexandre Pires1ORCID,SOARES Bruno Eleres2,ROTUNDO Matheus Marcos3,CAIRES Rodrigo Antunes4,ROSA Ricardo de Souza5,SANTOS Wagner César Rosa dos5,CORDEIRO Ana Patrícia Barros6,ROMÃO JUNIOR João Gomes5,AKAMA Alberto7,WOSIACKI Wolmar Benjamin7,KLAUTAU Alex Garcia Cavalleiro de Macedo5,CINTRA Israel Hidenburgo Aniceto8,BARTHEM Ronaldo7

Affiliation:

1. Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Brazil; Universidade Federal da Paraíba, Brazil

2. University of Toronto-Scarborough, Canada

3. Universidade Santa Cecília, Brazil

4. Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil

5. Centro Nacional de Pesquisa e Conservação da Biodiversidade Marinha do Norte, Brazil

6. Universidade da Amazônia, Brazil

7. Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Brazil

8. Universidade Federal Rural da Amazônia, Brazil

Abstract

ABSTRACT The piramutaba, Brachyplatystoma vaillantii is a freshwater catfish that is the most abundant fishery resource in the Amazon estuary. Piramutaba trawling is done on industrial fishing scale and is characterized by the presence of many freshwater and marine bycatch species, with and without commercial value. Here we describe the bycatch of the industrial fishery of piramutaba in the Amazon estuary and evaluate the relationship of two important environmental factors, depth and salinity, with the accidental capture of freshwater and marine fishes in the Amazon estuary in the rainy and dry seasons. We identified 21 cartilaginous fish species (19.1% freshwater and 80.9% marine) and 125 bony fish species (25.6% freshwater and 74.4% marine). The bycatch included 64 species without commercial value (43% of all bycatch species), which are always discarded. Freshwater and estuarine fishes exhibited significantly higher abundances in shallower environments, while marine fishes were similarly abundant along the entire depth gradient. On the contrary, the abundance of freshwater fishes significantly decreased, and that of estuarine and marine fishes significantly increased with increasing salinity. Regarding the conservation status of the bycatch species, one is classified as vulnerable (VU), and seven as critically endangered (CR). The information on the bycatch of piramutaba fishery in the Amazon estuary is important to subsidize regional fisheries policies and the management of protected areas.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences

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