4.5 Article

Population parameters of the orange mud crab Scylla olivacea (Herbst, 1796) from the Sundarban mangrove forest in Bangladesh

Journal

HELIYON
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2021.e06223

Keywords

Growth; Recruitment; Mortality; Exploitation; Scylla olivacea; Bangladesh

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The study on orange mud crab population in the Sundarban mangrove forest of Bangladesh revealed male domination, higher growth rate in males than females, differences in growth parameters and mortality rates between males and females. Population recruitment showed a bimodal pattern, with peak recruitment for males from November to January and for females from February to April, with higher exploitation rate in males compared to females.
Population parameters of orange mud crab (Scylla olivacea) were estimated, aiming to determine sex ratios, carapace width-body weight (CW-BW) relationships, asymptotic width (CW alpha), growth coefficient (K), mortality (Z, M, and F), recruitment and level of exploitation (E) in the Sundarban mangrove forest, located in the south western part of Bangladesh. Year-round samples were collected using hook-lines and baited traps, the population parameters were measured from CW frequency data using FiSAT-II analyzer. The study showed that the overall male and female sex ratio was 1:0.66, revealing a male domination in the study area. The CW-BW relationship indicated that the increment rate in the BW of the male crabs (b = 3.06, R-2 = 0.98) were higher than that of female (b = 2.62; R-2 = 0.98) S. olivacea. The b value differed significantly (P < 0.006) from isometric growth (b = 3) where males exhibited positive and females exhibited negative growth allometry. Estimated CW alpha for male and female were 164 mm and 152 mm along with K values 0.90 yr(-1) and 0.76 yr(-1), respectively. Total mortality (Z) was 2.67 yr(-1) and 1.57 yr(-1), natural mortality (M) was 0.98 yr(-1) and 0.90 yr(-1) and fishing mortality (F) was 1.69 yr(-1) and 0.67 yr(-1) for male and female, accordingly. Recruitment of both sexes exhibited a bimodal recruitment pattern where young population occurs continuously throughout the year and a major peak of recruitment for males was observed from November to January and for female it was from February to April. The estimated exploitation rate (E) for male (0.63) was higher than the female (0.43) where the E for male exceeded the maximum permissible limit (E = 0.50). A remarkable range of fishing pressure at lower size classes was revealed in this study and thus framing minimum legal size is crucial for effective management of the population.

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