Growth, productivity, and relative extinction risk of a data-sparse devil ray

Sebastián A. Pardo, Holly K. Kindsvater, Elizabeth Cuevas-Zimbrón, Oscar Sosa-Nishizaki, Juan Carlos Pérez-Jiménez, Nicholas K. Dulvy

Résultat de recherche: Articleexamen par les pairs

49 Citations (Scopus)

Résumé

Devil rays (Mobula spp.) face intensifying fishing pressure to meet the ongoing international demand for gill plates. The paucity of information on growth, mortality, and fishing effort for devil rays make quantifying population growth rates and extinction risk challenging. Furthermore, unlike manta rays (Manta spp.), devil rays have not been listed on CITES. Here, we use a published size-at-age dataset for the Spinetail Devil Ray (Mobula japanica), to estimate somatic growth rates, age at maturity, maximum age, and natural and fishing mortality. We then estimate a plausible distribution of the maximum intrinsic population growth rate (rmax) and compare it to 95 other chondrichthyans. We find evidence that larger devil ray species have low somatic growth rate, low annual reproductive output, and low maximum population growth rates, suggesting they have low productivity. Fishing rates of a small-scale artisanal Mexican fishery were comparable to our estimate of rmax, and therefore probably unsustainable. Devil ray rmax is very similar to that of manta rays, indicating devil rays can potentially be driven to local extinction at low levels of fishing mortality and that a similar degree of protection for both groups is warranted.

Langue d'origineEnglish
Numéro d'article33745
JournalScientific Reports
Volume6
DOI
Statut de publicationPublished - sept. 23 2016
Publié à l'externeOui

Note bibliographique

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2016.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • General

Empreinte numérique

Plonger dans les sujets de recherche 'Growth, productivity, and relative extinction risk of a data-sparse devil ray'. Ensemble, ils forment une empreinte numérique unique.

Citer

Pardo, S. A., Kindsvater, H. K., Cuevas-Zimbrón, E., Sosa-Nishizaki, O., Pérez-Jiménez, J. C., & Dulvy, N. K. (2016). Growth, productivity, and relative extinction risk of a data-sparse devil ray. Scientific Reports, 6, Article 33745. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep33745