Local ecological knowledge of vulnerable marine ecosystems of the Portuguese mainland continental shelf and upper slope

Sponges and corals form highly structured and vulnerable marine ecosystems (VMEs) that serve as refuge areas and feeding grounds for many marine species. Knowledge on the distribution of these VMEs is critical to ensure their sustainable management and conservation but is largely lacking in some are...

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Main Author: Soares, Ana Sofia Carvalho
Other Authors: Xavier, Joana Rita Bogalho Teixeira, Pita, Cristina Brice
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1480
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10773/33509
id ftria:oai:ria.ua.pt:10773/33509
record_format openpolar
spelling ftria:oai:ria.ua.pt:10773/33509 2023-05-15T17:08:48+02:00 Local ecological knowledge of vulnerable marine ecosystems of the Portuguese mainland continental shelf and upper slope Conhecimento ecológico local de ecossistemas marinhos vulneráveis na plataforma e talude continental portuguesa Soares, Ana Sofia Carvalho Xavier, Joana Rita Bogalho Teixeira Pita, Cristina Brice 2023-12-22 http://hdl.handle.net/10773/33509 eng eng OLD/2019/044 NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000040 http://hdl.handle.net/10773/33509 embargoedAccess https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ CC-BY Fishers’ perceptions Bottom fisheries Sponges and corals Species distributions Mesophotic Deep-sea masterThesis 1480 ftria 2022-05-25T18:39:34Z Sponges and corals form highly structured and vulnerable marine ecosystems (VMEs) that serve as refuge areas and feeding grounds for many marine species. Knowledge on the distribution of these VMEs is critical to ensure their sustainable management and conservation but is largely lacking in some areas. This study aimed to co-develop a knowledge baseline on the diversity and distribution of VME-indicator species (VMEIs) by assembling Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) of professional fishers operating bottom-contacting gears in mainland North and Central Portugal. In total, 70 fishermen of commercial vessels (trawlers, gill- and trammel netters and bottom longliners) were interviewed in three fishing harbours (Póvoa de Varzim, Matosinhos, Aveiro). We assessed fishers’ LEK, by asking them to identify species from a catalogue, and provide information on their geographical and bathymetric distribution, and abundance. In total, 54 species in the catalogue were recognised by the fishermen, of which 33 are currently classified as indicators of various VME habitat types such as cold-water coral reefs, coral gardens, seapen fields and deep-sea sponge aggregations. The framework-forming scleractinian corals Dendrophyllia cornigera, Lophelia pertusa, Dendrophyllia ramea, alongside the soft coral Callogorgia verticillata, the red Corallium rubrum and the hydrocoral Errina dabneyi were the species most commonly recognised. Sponges were only occasionally recognised but among these, rock sponges (Neochrammeniella bowerbankii and Neophrissospongia nolitangere) and other demospongiae (Axinella infundibuliformis and Cliona celata) were the ones fishermen recognised most. The higher average number of species recognised by fishermen using gill-/trammel nets vs trawls reflects the communities associated with the type of seafloor (hard vs soft substrate) over which these two fleets operate. Level of fishing experience and role onboard doesn’t seem to influence their LEK. This study shows the immense potential of LEK as a tool for the ... Master Thesis Lophelia pertusa Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro (RIA)
institution Open Polar
collection Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro (RIA)
op_collection_id ftria
language English
topic Fishers’ perceptions
Bottom fisheries
Sponges and corals
Species distributions
Mesophotic
Deep-sea
spellingShingle Fishers’ perceptions
Bottom fisheries
Sponges and corals
Species distributions
Mesophotic
Deep-sea
Soares, Ana Sofia Carvalho
Local ecological knowledge of vulnerable marine ecosystems of the Portuguese mainland continental shelf and upper slope
topic_facet Fishers’ perceptions
Bottom fisheries
Sponges and corals
Species distributions
Mesophotic
Deep-sea
description Sponges and corals form highly structured and vulnerable marine ecosystems (VMEs) that serve as refuge areas and feeding grounds for many marine species. Knowledge on the distribution of these VMEs is critical to ensure their sustainable management and conservation but is largely lacking in some areas. This study aimed to co-develop a knowledge baseline on the diversity and distribution of VME-indicator species (VMEIs) by assembling Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) of professional fishers operating bottom-contacting gears in mainland North and Central Portugal. In total, 70 fishermen of commercial vessels (trawlers, gill- and trammel netters and bottom longliners) were interviewed in three fishing harbours (Póvoa de Varzim, Matosinhos, Aveiro). We assessed fishers’ LEK, by asking them to identify species from a catalogue, and provide information on their geographical and bathymetric distribution, and abundance. In total, 54 species in the catalogue were recognised by the fishermen, of which 33 are currently classified as indicators of various VME habitat types such as cold-water coral reefs, coral gardens, seapen fields and deep-sea sponge aggregations. The framework-forming scleractinian corals Dendrophyllia cornigera, Lophelia pertusa, Dendrophyllia ramea, alongside the soft coral Callogorgia verticillata, the red Corallium rubrum and the hydrocoral Errina dabneyi were the species most commonly recognised. Sponges were only occasionally recognised but among these, rock sponges (Neochrammeniella bowerbankii and Neophrissospongia nolitangere) and other demospongiae (Axinella infundibuliformis and Cliona celata) were the ones fishermen recognised most. The higher average number of species recognised by fishermen using gill-/trammel nets vs trawls reflects the communities associated with the type of seafloor (hard vs soft substrate) over which these two fleets operate. Level of fishing experience and role onboard doesn’t seem to influence their LEK. This study shows the immense potential of LEK as a tool for the ...
author2 Xavier, Joana Rita Bogalho Teixeira
Pita, Cristina Brice
format Master Thesis
author Soares, Ana Sofia Carvalho
author_facet Soares, Ana Sofia Carvalho
author_sort Soares, Ana Sofia Carvalho
title Local ecological knowledge of vulnerable marine ecosystems of the Portuguese mainland continental shelf and upper slope
title_short Local ecological knowledge of vulnerable marine ecosystems of the Portuguese mainland continental shelf and upper slope
title_full Local ecological knowledge of vulnerable marine ecosystems of the Portuguese mainland continental shelf and upper slope
title_fullStr Local ecological knowledge of vulnerable marine ecosystems of the Portuguese mainland continental shelf and upper slope
title_full_unstemmed Local ecological knowledge of vulnerable marine ecosystems of the Portuguese mainland continental shelf and upper slope
title_sort local ecological knowledge of vulnerable marine ecosystems of the portuguese mainland continental shelf and upper slope
publishDate 1480
url http://hdl.handle.net/10773/33509
genre Lophelia pertusa
genre_facet Lophelia pertusa
op_relation OLD/2019/044
NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000040
http://hdl.handle.net/10773/33509
op_rights embargoedAccess
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
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