First
recording of Portuguese dogfish shark in Maltese waters 19
November 2004 | ![]() | |||||
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First recording
of Portuguese dogfish shark in Maltese waters The
study was conducted over the past two years as a Master's level research project
within the Conservation Biology Research Group of the University of Malta's Biology
Department.
The work considered the elasmobranches (shark and ray species) from both local and biological perspectives in order to provide a first detailed recognition of the way each species was being affected by local human pressures. The aim was to go beyond the normal records, such as the listings of species encountered by fishermen at fish landing sites and to look at the life stages of species caught with different fishing gear. Apart from the fishing impact, the abundance of different species around the Maltese coasts was also studied through scuba diving surveys undertaken year round. As a basis to this detailed field work, an extensive literature survey and compilation of all data gathered on this group was reviewed and critically assessed. Fisheries statistics dating back to 1948 and held by the National Statistics Office were studied. But most of these records were limited since the different species were not specified but were grouped. This limited their validity and pointed to an important management problem - a lack of detailed species record keeping. This could be due to the fact that categories used by the fisheries department to record the majority of the elasmobranches landings considered numerous species as one. This did not make sense biologically as the different species would have contrasting life histories and different conservation needs. Such categorisation provided a great problem due to the fact that some species were more sensitive to exploitation than others, possibly overlooking the effects of exploitation on the more sensitive species. Another problem was the indiscriminate exploitation of these species, where in some cases even new born and gravid individuals were landed. Such exploitation was highly unsustainable due to the fact that only small numbers would be left to grow and contribute to future generations. The study compiled data on the biological parameters for each species to provide further understanding as to the extent to which local fishing practices and elasmobranches needed sustainable and conservation management. A coastal scuba study around
the Maltese coastal waters provided information on the distribution and the habitats
of the species found in Maltese coastal waters. So while numerous species were caught offshore very few species
were found closer to coast and most coastal elasmobranches spotted occasionally
close to coast rarely stayed for long. The majority of the elasmobranches found
coastally belonged to the rays family and were found on sandy bottoms. This showed
that sandy seabeds were important habitats that needed to be safeguarded and should
not be considered as a dead substratum. Important hotspots of abundance at particular
times of the year were discovered pointing towards the need for coastal and offshore
marine conservation areas that would allow for local elasmobranches to be protected
effectively.
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