Long-term trends of fishery landings and target fish populations in the lower La Plata basin

Author:

Scarabotti Pablo A.1ORCID,Lucifora Luis O.2ORCID,Espínola Luis A.2ORCID,Rabuffetti Ana P.3ORCID,Liotta Jorge4ORCID,Mantinian Julia E.5ORCID,Roux Juan P.6ORCID,Silva Natalia6ORCID,Balboni Leandro5ORCID,Vargas Facundo7ORCID,Demonte Lucio Danilo8ORCID,Sánchez Sebastián6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Argentina; Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Argentina

2. Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Argentina

3. Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Argentina; , Argentina

4. Ministerio de Agricultura, Ganadería y Pesca de la Nación, Argentina; Museo Regional de Ciencias Naturales “Antonio Scasso”, Argentina

5. Ministerio de Agricultura, Ganadería y Pesca de la Nación, Argentina

6. Universidad Nacional del Nordeste, Argentina

7. Departamento Fauna y Pesca, Argentina

8. Ministerio de Ambiente y Cambio Climático de Santa Fe, Argentina

Abstract

Abstract The La Plata basin is the second largest basin of South America and has supported important river fisheries for more than a century. In this paper, we evaluate for the first time the historical trends of landings of 21 fish taxa and the recent population trends of 27 species of commercial fishes in the lower La Plata basin (Argentina). We compiled three kinds of data sets: Total fishery landings (between 1934 and 1986) and exports (1994‒2019), fisheries monitoring programs of Chaco and Santa Fe provinces in the Paraná River (2009‒2019), and surveys of fish populations in the Upper (Corrientes, 1993‒2020) and Middle (EBIPES, 2005‒2020) Paraná River. The analysis of the historical landings showed more species declining in the lower portion of the basin than in the upper basin. Regarding recent population trends, Pimelodus spp., Hoplias spp., Salminus brasiliensis, Luciopimelodus pati, and Ageneiosus spp. declined in more than one region, while Megaleporinus spp., Pterodoras granulosus, and Oxydoras kneri showed stable to positive trends, with the other species varying in their trends between regions. These tendencies could be associated to a combination of factors such as overfishing and environmental changes that would require an ecosystem approach for their adequate management.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Subject

Aquatic Science,Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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