Coelacanth discoveries in Madagascar, with recommendations on research and conservation

Author:

Cooke Andrew1,Bruton Michael2ORCID,Ravololoharinjara Minosoa1

Affiliation:

1. Resolve sarl, Ivandry Business Center, Antananarivo, Madagascar

2. Honorary Research Associate, South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity, Makhanda, South Africa

Abstract

The presence of populations of the Western Indian Ocean coelacanth (Latimeria chalumnae) in Madagascar is not surprising considering the vast range of habitats which the ancient island offers. The discovery of a substantial population of coelacanths through handline fishing on the steep volcanic slopes of Comoros archipelago initially provided an important source of museum specimens and was the main focus of coelacanth research for almost 40 years. The advent of deep-set gillnets, or jarifa, for catching sharks, driven by the demand for shark fins and oil from China in the mid- to late 1980s, resulted in an explosion of coelacanth captures in Madagascar and other countries in the Western Indian Ocean. We review coelacanth catches in Madagascar and present evidence for the existence of one or more populations of L. chalumnae distributed along about 1000 km of the southern and western coasts of the island. We also hypothesise that coelacanths are likely to occur around the whole continental margin of Madagascar, making it the epicentre of coelacanth distribution in the Western Indian Ocean and the likely progenitor of the younger Comoros coelacanth population. Finally, we discuss the importance and vulnerability of the population of coelacanths inhabiting the submarine slopes of the Onilahy canyon in southwest Madagascar and make recommendations for further research and conservation.

Funder

Resolve sarl

Publisher

Academy of Science of South Africa

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference59 articles.

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2. Smith JLB. Old Fourlegs. The story of the coelacanth. London: Longmans, Green & Co.; 1956.

3. Bruton MN. The fishy Smiths. A biography of JLB and Margaret Smith. Cape Town: Penguin; 2017.

4. Smith JLB. The second coelacanth. Nature. 1953;171:99-101. https://doi.org/10.1038/171099a0

5. Bruton MN. The annotated Old Fourlegs. The updated story of the coelacanth. Cape Town: Struik; 2017.

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