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DEMOGRAPHICS OF A HEAVILY EXPLOITED DEEP WATER SHARK ECHINORHINUS CF. BRUCUS (BONNATERRE, 1788) FROM THE SOUTH-EASTERN ARABIAN SEA
Author(s) -
K Akhilesh,
Anulekshmi Chellappan,
K. K. Bineesh,
U Ganga,
N G K Pillai
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
indian journal of fisheries
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.216
H-Index - 12
ISSN - 0970-6011
DOI - 10.21077/ijf.2019.67.1.92453-02
Subject(s) - fishery , bycatch , fauna , geography , stock assessment , stock (firearms) , fisheries management , oceanography , fishing , biology , ecology , geology , archaeology
In the absence of direct consumption importance and considering as low value bycatch, many vulnerable non-target species, especially slow growing deep water fauna, are overlooked in tropical fisheries research and management. The bramble shark Echinorhinus cf. brucus (Bonnaterre, 1788) is one such species, subjected to a significant non-targeted deep water fishery off southern India. A length frequency based stock assessment of bramble shark caught in trawl fisheries from the south-eastern Arabian Sea suggests that, E. cf. brucus is a moderately slow growing (K=0.12 year-1) and moderately long lived shark species (Tmax = 25 years, L¥= 333 at corresponding age of 55 years) which is overexploited (M=0.17, Z=0.39) in the region. In view of resilience capacity and vulnerability of deep sea fisheries, improved research and monitoring programmes are urgently required to ensure a sustainable future for India’s expanding deep-sea and distant water fisheries.

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