Goliath grouper Epinephelus itajara (Teleostei: Serranidae) in the Mexican Caribbean local ecological knowledge and habitat use

Rare species necessitate alternative survey techniques and, in the case of exploited resources, any attempt to monitor their abundance with a meaningful benchmark should also include local ecological knowledge (LEK) of local users. This study evaluates the status of Goliath grouper (Epinephelus itajara) in the Mexican Caribbean via LEK and also direct acquisition of data on habitat use of the species in Chetumal Bay, taking into account distribution by body size, site, and habitat. We interviewed 124 fshers about their knowledge and experience with Goliath grouper, comparing northern to southern Mexican Caribbean, as well as older vs. younger fshers. The species is a well-identifed resource; fshers are able to describe many behavioral and habitat-use traits, but they fnd it difcult to discern males from females and juveniles from adults. The fshery is opportunistic and the capture is commercialized and consumed only locally. The species has declined over the last decades, the probable cause being the increase in the number of fshers and boats, as well as the use of harpoon by divers. In addition to the interviews, 54 specimens were recorded in Chetumal Bay, standard length 517–1613 mm. Goliath grouper preferred submerged sinkholes and caves, locally called “pozas,” with water temperature of 23–31 °C and salinity of 4.5–30.0 psu, 1.5–40.0 m deep. Although access to “pozas” can be dangerous—a fact that could favor viability of Goliath grouper—even in these sites, the fshery extracts young and subadult animals, probably afecting population dynamics.

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Main Authors: García Téllez, Ninel Maestra autora 22136, Schmitter Soto, Juan Jacobo Doctor autor 2049, Barrientos Medina, Roberto Carlos autor 14671, Herrera Pavón, Roberto Luis Ingeniero autor 8679
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Epinephelus itajara, Peces, Conocimiento ecológico tradicional, Hábitat (Ecología), Dinámica de la población, Pesca artesanal, Zoogeografía, Artfrosur,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-022-01275-z
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:632002024-07-16T11:27:33ZGoliath grouper Epinephelus itajara (Teleostei: Serranidae) in the Mexican Caribbean local ecological knowledge and habitat use García Téllez, Ninel Maestra autora 22136 Schmitter Soto, Juan Jacobo Doctor autor 2049 Barrientos Medina, Roberto Carlos autor 14671 Herrera Pavón, Roberto Luis Ingeniero autor 8679 textengRare species necessitate alternative survey techniques and, in the case of exploited resources, any attempt to monitor their abundance with a meaningful benchmark should also include local ecological knowledge (LEK) of local users. This study evaluates the status of Goliath grouper (Epinephelus itajara) in the Mexican Caribbean via LEK and also direct acquisition of data on habitat use of the species in Chetumal Bay, taking into account distribution by body size, site, and habitat. We interviewed 124 fshers about their knowledge and experience with Goliath grouper, comparing northern to southern Mexican Caribbean, as well as older vs. younger fshers. The species is a well-identifed resource; fshers are able to describe many behavioral and habitat-use traits, but they fnd it difcult to discern males from females and juveniles from adults. The fshery is opportunistic and the capture is commercialized and consumed only locally. The species has declined over the last decades, the probable cause being the increase in the number of fshers and boats, as well as the use of harpoon by divers. In addition to the interviews, 54 specimens were recorded in Chetumal Bay, standard length 517–1613 mm. Goliath grouper preferred submerged sinkholes and caves, locally called “pozas,” with water temperature of 23–31 °C and salinity of 4.5–30.0 psu, 1.5–40.0 m deep. Although access to “pozas” can be dangerous—a fact that could favor viability of Goliath grouper—even in these sites, the fshery extracts young and subadult animals, probably afecting population dynamics.Rare species necessitate alternative survey techniques and, in the case of exploited resources, any attempt to monitor their abundance with a meaningful benchmark should also include local ecological knowledge (LEK) of local users. This study evaluates the status of Goliath grouper (Epinephelus itajara) in the Mexican Caribbean via LEK and also direct acquisition of data on habitat use of the species in Chetumal Bay, taking into account distribution by body size, site, and habitat. We interviewed 124 fshers about their knowledge and experience with Goliath grouper, comparing northern to southern Mexican Caribbean, as well as older vs. younger fshers. The species is a well-identifed resource; fshers are able to describe many behavioral and habitat-use traits, but they fnd it difcult to discern males from females and juveniles from adults. The fshery is opportunistic and the capture is commercialized and consumed only locally. The species has declined over the last decades, the probable cause being the increase in the number of fshers and boats, as well as the use of harpoon by divers. In addition to the interviews, 54 specimens were recorded in Chetumal Bay, standard length 517–1613 mm. Goliath grouper preferred submerged sinkholes and caves, locally called “pozas,” with water temperature of 23–31 °C and salinity of 4.5–30.0 psu, 1.5–40.0 m deep. Although access to “pozas” can be dangerous—a fact that could favor viability of Goliath grouper—even in these sites, the fshery extracts young and subadult animals, probably afecting population dynamics.Epinephelus itajaraPecesConocimiento ecológico tradicionalHábitat (Ecología)Dinámica de la poblaciónPesca artesanalZoogeografíaArtfrosurEnvironmental Biology of Fisheshttps://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-022-01275-zDisponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Epinephelus itajara
Peces
Conocimiento ecológico tradicional
Hábitat (Ecología)
Dinámica de la población
Pesca artesanal
Zoogeografía
Artfrosur
Epinephelus itajara
Peces
Conocimiento ecológico tradicional
Hábitat (Ecología)
Dinámica de la población
Pesca artesanal
Zoogeografía
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Epinephelus itajara
Peces
Conocimiento ecológico tradicional
Hábitat (Ecología)
Dinámica de la población
Pesca artesanal
Zoogeografía
Artfrosur
Epinephelus itajara
Peces
Conocimiento ecológico tradicional
Hábitat (Ecología)
Dinámica de la población
Pesca artesanal
Zoogeografía
Artfrosur
García Téllez, Ninel Maestra autora 22136
Schmitter Soto, Juan Jacobo Doctor autor 2049
Barrientos Medina, Roberto Carlos autor 14671
Herrera Pavón, Roberto Luis Ingeniero autor 8679
Goliath grouper Epinephelus itajara (Teleostei: Serranidae) in the Mexican Caribbean local ecological knowledge and habitat use
description Rare species necessitate alternative survey techniques and, in the case of exploited resources, any attempt to monitor their abundance with a meaningful benchmark should also include local ecological knowledge (LEK) of local users. This study evaluates the status of Goliath grouper (Epinephelus itajara) in the Mexican Caribbean via LEK and also direct acquisition of data on habitat use of the species in Chetumal Bay, taking into account distribution by body size, site, and habitat. We interviewed 124 fshers about their knowledge and experience with Goliath grouper, comparing northern to southern Mexican Caribbean, as well as older vs. younger fshers. The species is a well-identifed resource; fshers are able to describe many behavioral and habitat-use traits, but they fnd it difcult to discern males from females and juveniles from adults. The fshery is opportunistic and the capture is commercialized and consumed only locally. The species has declined over the last decades, the probable cause being the increase in the number of fshers and boats, as well as the use of harpoon by divers. In addition to the interviews, 54 specimens were recorded in Chetumal Bay, standard length 517–1613 mm. Goliath grouper preferred submerged sinkholes and caves, locally called “pozas,” with water temperature of 23–31 °C and salinity of 4.5–30.0 psu, 1.5–40.0 m deep. Although access to “pozas” can be dangerous—a fact that could favor viability of Goliath grouper—even in these sites, the fshery extracts young and subadult animals, probably afecting population dynamics.
format Texto
topic_facet Epinephelus itajara
Peces
Conocimiento ecológico tradicional
Hábitat (Ecología)
Dinámica de la población
Pesca artesanal
Zoogeografía
Artfrosur
author García Téllez, Ninel Maestra autora 22136
Schmitter Soto, Juan Jacobo Doctor autor 2049
Barrientos Medina, Roberto Carlos autor 14671
Herrera Pavón, Roberto Luis Ingeniero autor 8679
author_facet García Téllez, Ninel Maestra autora 22136
Schmitter Soto, Juan Jacobo Doctor autor 2049
Barrientos Medina, Roberto Carlos autor 14671
Herrera Pavón, Roberto Luis Ingeniero autor 8679
author_sort García Téllez, Ninel Maestra autora 22136
title Goliath grouper Epinephelus itajara (Teleostei: Serranidae) in the Mexican Caribbean local ecological knowledge and habitat use
title_short Goliath grouper Epinephelus itajara (Teleostei: Serranidae) in the Mexican Caribbean local ecological knowledge and habitat use
title_full Goliath grouper Epinephelus itajara (Teleostei: Serranidae) in the Mexican Caribbean local ecological knowledge and habitat use
title_fullStr Goliath grouper Epinephelus itajara (Teleostei: Serranidae) in the Mexican Caribbean local ecological knowledge and habitat use
title_full_unstemmed Goliath grouper Epinephelus itajara (Teleostei: Serranidae) in the Mexican Caribbean local ecological knowledge and habitat use
title_sort goliath grouper epinephelus itajara (teleostei: serranidae) in the mexican caribbean local ecological knowledge and habitat use
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-022-01275-z
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