SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.29 issue3Molting cycle and reproduction in the population of the shrimp Pleoticus muelleri (Crustacea, Penaeoidea) from Mar del PlataPreliminary estimation of optimal sample size for assessing the recruitment of Mesodesma donacium (Lamarck, 1818) on beaches of central-north Chile: Application of the power analysis author indexsubject indexsearch form
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Indicators

Related links

  • Have no similar articlesSimilars in SciELO

Share


Ciencias marinas

Print version ISSN 0185-3880

Abstract

AURIOLES-GAMBOA, David; GARCIA-RODRIGUEZ, Francisco; RAMIREZ-RODRIGUEZ, Mauricio  and  HERNANDEZ-CAMACHO, Claudia. Interaction between the California sea lion and the artisanal fishery in La Paz Bay, Gulf of California, Mexico. Cienc. mar [online]. 2003, vol.29, n.3, pp.357-370. ISSN 0185-3880.

Information about California sea lion prey and the artisanal fishery catch in the area of the Los Islotes sea lion rookery, in northeastern La Paz Bay, México, was examined to estimate potential overlap and competition between these consumers. Sea lions there consume about 435 t annually, with peak consumption in winter. The artisanal fishery captures about 730 t of bony fish annually, with an increase in summer. Based on a five-year study, sea lions preyed on 76 fish species, but in terms of relative importance (RI), 35% of these was represented by only five species, of which only one has regional commercial value. Principal fishery targets comprised 28 species in four families, representing 76.2% of the total capture. Of these, the remains of only two species appeared in sea lion scats, and of them, only the spotted sand bass, Paralabrax maculatofasciatus, has significant commercial value, but it is poorly represented as sea lion prey (< 5% RI). Despite the limited overlap with fishery target species, the Los Islotes population exhibited the highest entanglement index (7-9%) of all sea lion colonies studied in Mexico. All sex/age categories of sea lions showed similar entanglement indices, with the entangled fraction approximately proportional to the total population for three surveys in different years. The data suggest that most animals become entangled by accident. Entanglement is probably due to the combined effect of extensive gillnet deployment in the bay and overlap in the areas where sea lions feed and fishermen operate.

Keywords : California sea lion; artisanal fishery; feeding habits; entanglement; Mexico.

        · abstract in Spanish     · text in Spanish     · Spanish ( pdf )

 

Creative Commons License All the contents of this journal, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License