4.2 Article

Trophic overlap between marine mammals and fisheries in subtropical waters in the western South Atlantic

Journal

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
Volume 639, Issue -, Pages 215-232

Publisher

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps13284

Keywords

Trophic interactions; Feeding ecology; Marine mammals; Fisheries; Marine conservation

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento Pessoal de Nivel Superior - CAPES
  2. Fundo Nacional do Meio Ambiente - FNMA-MMA
  3. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico - CNPq
  4. CNPq [572180/2008-0, 151307/2005-9, 303813/2011-3, 308650/2014-0]

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Marine mammals and humans are apex predators and both may compete for fish in ecosystems under continuous fishing pressure. We assessed the degree of trophic overlap between prey species found in the diet of 5 marine mammals (39 specimens of sea lion Otaria flavescens, 61 fur seals Arctocephalus australis, 76 franciscana dolphins Pontoporia blainvillei, 25 bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus and 28 Lahille's bottlenose dolphins T gephyreus) and the catches of the 6 main commercial fishing gears used in southern Brazil (coastal gilinets, oceanic gillnets, purse seine, demersal pair trawling, bottom [single] trawl and double-rig trawling) between 1993 and 2016. An adjusted general overlap index indicated an overall moderate to high overlap. Specific overlap analysis showed that O. flavescens and T. truncatus presented high trophic relationships with fisheries, followed by T gephyreus. Smaller interactions were observed for A. australis and P. blainvillei, even though they also exploit commercial fishing resources. Coastal gillnet and pair bottom trawling are the fisheries that most target the fish species favoured by O. flavescens, T. gephyreus and T. truncatus. The information presented in this study on trophic interactions may assist decision making for both fishery management and conservation measures for these apex predators. Commercial fishing activities are a major threat to marine mammals both regionally and globally. Current levels of fishing or its intensification may lead to dramatic changes in the coastal marine food web, including additional threats to coastal marine mammal populations in southern Brazil.

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