4.6 Article

Biological Knowledge of Thornback Ray (Raja clavata) from the Azores: Improving Scientific Information for the Effectiveness of Species-Specific Management Measures

Journal

BIOLOGY-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biology10070676

Keywords

elasmobranchs; skates; demersal; commercial fish; life history; stock structure; assessment; fisheries management

Categories

Funding

  1. European Maritime and Fisheries Fund (EMFF) through the Regional Government of the Azores under the MAR2020 operational program [MAR-01.03.02-FEAMP-0039]
  2. Regional Government of the Azores under the DEMERSAIS project
  3. FCT Ph.D. fellowship [SFRH/BD/124720/2016]

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Sharks, rays, and skates are increasingly recognized as endangered due to their life-history characteristics, fishing pressure, and habitat degradation, with the thornback ray Raja clavata being one of the most economically important in Northwest European seas. The study analyzed approximately 25 years of data to improve understanding of habitat preferences, spatial distribution, growth patterns, sex ratios, mortality rates, and reproduction of the species. Results showed that Raja clavata is mainly caught at depths up to 250 m, with females being larger and more abundant than males, and having a long lifespan, large size, slow growth, and low natural mortality.
Simple Summary Sharks, rays, and skates are increasingly being recognized as endangered due to their life-history characteristics, fishing pressure, and habitat degradation. The thornback ray Raja clavata is one of the most commercially important skates in the seas of Northwest Europe. However, due to a lack of biological knowledge about this species in Azorean waters, the types of stock evaluations that can be performed are restricted. This study expands current knowledge on vertical distribution, size-frequency distributions, growth patterns, sex ratios, mortality rates, and reproduction of this species, and provides a baseline for further fishing monitoring. Elasmobranchs are globally recognized as vulnerable due to their life-history characteristics, fishing pressure, and habitat degradation. Among the skates and rays caught by commercial fisheries, the thornback ray Raja clavata is one of the most economically important in Northwest European seas. However, the scarcity of biological knowledge about this species in Azorean waters has limited the stock assessment types that can be conducted. To improve information on its habitat preferences, spatial distribution and movement pattern, growth, sex ratio, mortality, and reproduction, as well as to investigate long-term changes in abundance and size, this study analyzed approximately 25 years of fishery-dependent and independent data from the Azores. Raja clavata was mainly caught at depths up to 250 m. Most of the tagged fish were recaptured near the release point. A larger-deeper trend was found, and females were larger and more abundant than males. Life-history parameters showed that R. clavata has a long lifespan, large size, slow growth, and low natural mortality. The sustainability of its population is of concern to fisheries management and, while our findings suggested a relatively healthy stock in the Azores, a thorough increase in data quality is required to better understand the stock condition and prevent overexploitation.

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