Patterns of demersal fish distribution derived from line fishing experiment in Calauag Bay, Philippines

Long line experimental fishing was undertaken in 2005 to investigate patterns of distribution, catch composition, catch rate and size structure of demersal fishes at three coral reef sites with varying levels of fishing pressure in Calauag Bay, Philippines. Catch and size of most fishes were similar...

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Main Authors: Mamauag, Samuel S., Aliño, Porfirio M., Gonzales, Rhia Odessa M., Deocadez, Melchor R.
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Published: Animo Repository 2009
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11469
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Institution: De La Salle University
id oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-11718
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-117182024-01-29T07:01:18Z Patterns of demersal fish distribution derived from line fishing experiment in Calauag Bay, Philippines Mamauag, Samuel S. Aliño, Porfirio M. Gonzales, Rhia Odessa M. Deocadez, Melchor R. Long line experimental fishing was undertaken in 2005 to investigate patterns of distribution, catch composition, catch rate and size structure of demersal fishes at three coral reef sites with varying levels of fishing pressure in Calauag Bay, Philippines. Catch and size of most fishes were similar in the three sites, and catch rates were generally low, suggesting overfishing which probably occurred over a span of decades, hence, a homogenizing effect upon fishery variables. On the other hand, some fish showed variation in the patterns, and habitat correlates were found to be more influential than fishing. A distinct spatial pattern revealed an assemblage consisting predominantly of reef-associated fishes occurring at estuarine habitats. Ontogenetic habitat movement was shown especially for the orange-spotted grouper Epinephelus coioides, which demonstrated small individuals only at creeks and mangroves whereas larger and presumably reproductively active fish were observed distinctly at adjacent reefs. This is the first study that highlights the significance of the creek-mangrove-reef habitat continuum to the distribution of marine demersal fishes in the Philippines, with implications that existing management needs to incorporate non-reef habitat protection with fisheries stock enhancement schemes such as fry grow-out culture together with adult sanctuary and refugia measures. 2009-12-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11469 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Groundfishes—Philippines—Calauag Bay Epinephelus—Philippines—Calauag Bay Coral reef fisheries—Philippines—Calauag Bay Biology
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Groundfishes—Philippines—Calauag Bay
Epinephelus—Philippines—Calauag Bay
Coral reef fisheries—Philippines—Calauag Bay
Biology
spellingShingle Groundfishes—Philippines—Calauag Bay
Epinephelus—Philippines—Calauag Bay
Coral reef fisheries—Philippines—Calauag Bay
Biology
Mamauag, Samuel S.
Aliño, Porfirio M.
Gonzales, Rhia Odessa M.
Deocadez, Melchor R.
Patterns of demersal fish distribution derived from line fishing experiment in Calauag Bay, Philippines
description Long line experimental fishing was undertaken in 2005 to investigate patterns of distribution, catch composition, catch rate and size structure of demersal fishes at three coral reef sites with varying levels of fishing pressure in Calauag Bay, Philippines. Catch and size of most fishes were similar in the three sites, and catch rates were generally low, suggesting overfishing which probably occurred over a span of decades, hence, a homogenizing effect upon fishery variables. On the other hand, some fish showed variation in the patterns, and habitat correlates were found to be more influential than fishing. A distinct spatial pattern revealed an assemblage consisting predominantly of reef-associated fishes occurring at estuarine habitats. Ontogenetic habitat movement was shown especially for the orange-spotted grouper Epinephelus coioides, which demonstrated small individuals only at creeks and mangroves whereas larger and presumably reproductively active fish were observed distinctly at adjacent reefs. This is the first study that highlights the significance of the creek-mangrove-reef habitat continuum to the distribution of marine demersal fishes in the Philippines, with implications that existing management needs to incorporate non-reef habitat protection with fisheries stock enhancement schemes such as fry grow-out culture together with adult sanctuary and refugia measures.
format text
author Mamauag, Samuel S.
Aliño, Porfirio M.
Gonzales, Rhia Odessa M.
Deocadez, Melchor R.
author_facet Mamauag, Samuel S.
Aliño, Porfirio M.
Gonzales, Rhia Odessa M.
Deocadez, Melchor R.
author_sort Mamauag, Samuel S.
title Patterns of demersal fish distribution derived from line fishing experiment in Calauag Bay, Philippines
title_short Patterns of demersal fish distribution derived from line fishing experiment in Calauag Bay, Philippines
title_full Patterns of demersal fish distribution derived from line fishing experiment in Calauag Bay, Philippines
title_fullStr Patterns of demersal fish distribution derived from line fishing experiment in Calauag Bay, Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of demersal fish distribution derived from line fishing experiment in Calauag Bay, Philippines
title_sort patterns of demersal fish distribution derived from line fishing experiment in calauag bay, philippines
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2009
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11469
_version_ 1789486087464288256