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(Reference retrieved automatically from Web of Science through information on FAPESP grant and its corresponding number as mentioned in the publication by the authors.)

Fishers and groupers (Epinephelus marginatus and E. morio) in the coast of Brazil: integrating information for conservation

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Begossi, Alpina [1, 2, 3] ; Salyvonchyk, Svetlana [2, 4] ; Glamuzina, Branko [2, 5] ; de Souza, Shirley Pacheco [2, 6] ; Lopes, Priscila F. M. [2, 7] ; Priolli, Regina H. G. [1, 2, 3] ; do Prado, Djalma Osmanir [3] ; Ramires, Milena [2, 3] ; Clauzet, Mariana [2, 8] ; Zapelini, Cleverson [9] ; Schneider, Daiana T. [10] ; Silva, Luis T. [10] ; Silvano, Renato A. M. [2, 10]
Total Authors: 13
Affiliation:
[1] Univ Estadual Campinas, NEPA, Capesca, Av Albert Einstein 291, BR-13083852 Campinas, SP - Brazil
[2] FIFO Www Fisheriesandfood Com, Fisheries & Food Inst, Santos - Brazil
[3] Univ Santa Cecilia, PPG Ecomar, R Cesario Mota 08, BR-11045040 Santos, SP - Brazil
[4] Natl Acad Sci Belarus, Inst Nat Management, 10 Skaryna St, Minsk 220114 - BELARUS
[5] Univ Dubrovnik, Dept Aquaculture, Dubrovnik 20207 - Croatia
[6] Fed Inst Educ Sci & Technol Sao Paulo, BR-11667 Caraguatatuba, SP - Brazil
[7] Univ Fed Rio Grande do Norte, Fishing Ecol Management & Econ Grp, Dept Ecol, BR-59078900 Natal, RN - Brazil
[8] Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro, IE, PPED, Av Pasteur 250, BR-22290902 Rio de Janeiro, RJ - Brazil
[9] Univ Estadual Santa Cruz, Ethnoconservat & Protected Areas Lab LECAP, Collaborator Researcher Programa Posgrad Sistemas, Ilheus, BA - Brazil
[10] Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, UFRGS, Dept Ecol, CP 15007, BR-91501970 Porto Alegre, RS - Brazil
Total Affiliations: 10
Document type: Journal article
Source: Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine; v. 15, n. 1 NOV 6 2019.
Web of Science Citations: 0
Abstract

Background Groupers are a vulnerable but economically important group of fish, especially for small-scale fisheries. We investigated catches and local ecological knowledge (LEK) of diet, habitat, and past fishing experiences. Methods Landings, prices, interviews, and restaurants demand for two species, Epinephelus marginatus (dusky grouper) and Epinephelus morio (red grouper), were registered. Results We visited 74 markets and 79 sites on the coast of Brazil in 2017-2018, and we interviewed 71 fishers: Bahia (NE), Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo (SE), and Santa Catarina (S). The landings sampled of dusky grouper (2016-2017) in Rio de Janeiro were: n = 222, size 38-109 cm, weight 1-24 kg, average 3.84 kg; in Sao Paulo, Sao Sebastiao were: n = 47, size 39-106 cm, weight 2-8 kg, average of 2.77 kg; and at Santos: n = 80, 26-120 cm, weight 0.36-15 kg, average 2.72 kg. Red grouper was observed in markets in the northeastern Brazil. We did not observe Epinephelus marginatus from Bahia northward; a maximum size of 200 cm was reported south of the Bahia, besides Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo coasts, 20 years ago (or longer) by 12 fishers. Local knowledge of fishers was important for grouper data of habitat and diet; the reproduction period was identified by fishers as September to March. Conclusions Groupers can be considered as a cultural and ecological keystone species. We suggest protective measures: 1) fishing zoning, 2) islands (MPAs) with the surveillance of fishers, 3) late Spring and early Summer as key periods for management (grouper reproduction), 4) studies on grouper larvae, 5) mapping of fishing spots, 6) studies on local knowledge. Collaboration with small-scale fishers and local knowledge could contribute to low-conflict management measures. In that regard, integrative models of management from Latin America, by using local knowledge and citizen science, could produce successful grouper management for Brazilian data-poor fisheries, a contrasting reality to the Mediterranean areas. Finally, the distribution of E. marginatus in Brazil leave us with questions: a) Have dusky groupers disappeared from Bahia because of a decline in the population? b) Was it uncommon in Northeast Brazil? c) Did changes in water temperatures forced a movement southward? (AU)

FAPESP's process: 14/16939-7 - Fishers and groupers [Epinephelus marginatus]: ecology, ethnoecology and food security in the Brazilian coast
Grantee:Alpina Begossi
Support Opportunities: Research Projects - Thematic Grants