Suppr超能文献

全球蝠鲼和鳐鱼的种群趋势和人类利用模式。

Global population trends and human use patterns of Manta and Mobula rays.

机构信息

Biology Department, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2013 Sep 11;8(9):e74835. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074835. eCollection 2013.

Abstract

Despite being the world's largest rays and providing significant revenue through dive tourism, little is known about the population status, exploitation and trade volume of the Mobulidae (mobulids; Manta and Mobula spp.). There is anecdotal evidence, however, that mobulid populations are declining, largely due to the recent emergence of a widespread trade for their gill rakers, which is reflected in increasing Food and Agriculture Organization landings trends. Here, we present results from two dedicated diver surveys, one from the eManta project, which includes summary observations from ninety 10°x10° regions with ∼200-62,000 dives per region, and the other from the Reef Environmental Education Foundation, which includes spatially more detailed observations from 3 regions with ∼4,000-118,000 dives per region. We show that mobulids as a group, which includes eleven species, have globally and regionally restricted distributions, typically have low sighting frequency (<1% of dives) and aggregate in only a few locations. Of the regions surveyed by divers, almost half (47%) report declining mobulid sightings over the last decade. Divers indicate that although mobulid ecotourism occurs in many regions (45% of those reported, n = 41) they are considered protected in only 32% of the regions. Mobulids being fished or sold in local markets were reported from 16% and 12% of regions, respectively, with most being adjacent to mobulid abundance hotspot and ecotourism regions (e.g. Sri Lanka, Indonesia, east Africa). Identification of regions where ecotourism and exploitation are at odds could help prioritize conservation efforts. Vulnerability analysis, using life history characteristics, indicates that Manta spp. are vulnerable to exploitation, tolerating only low fishing mortality rates; data limitations prohibited such analysis for Mobula spp. Our analyses support previous studies in showing the need for improved conservation and monitoring efforts, and suggest that international and enforceable management policies are required to prevent further population decline.

摘要

尽管蝠鲼是世界上最大的鳐鱼,通过潜水旅游带来了可观的收入,但人们对它们的种群状况、开发利用情况和贸易量知之甚少。然而,有传闻证据表明,蝠鲼种群正在减少,主要原因是它们的鳃耙最近出现了广泛的贸易,这反映在粮农组织的捕捞趋势不断增加。在这里,我们展示了两项专门的潜水调查结果,一项来自 eManta 项目,该项目包括 90 个 10°x10°区域的汇总观测结果,每个区域有 200-62000 次潜水,另一项来自珊瑚礁环境教育基金会,该基金会包括 3 个区域的空间更详细的观测结果,每个区域有 4000-118000 次潜水。我们表明,作为一个群体的蝠鲼,包括 11 个物种,在全球和区域范围内分布有限,通常只有很低的目击频率(<1%的潜水),并且只聚集在少数几个地方。在潜水员调查的区域中,近一半(47%)报告说过去十年蝠鲼的目击数量下降。潜水员表示,尽管在许多地区都有蝠鲼生态旅游活动(报告的 45%,n=41),但只有 32%的地区认为它们受到保护。在 16%和 12%的地区,分别有报告称蝠鲼被捕捞或在当地市场上出售,这些地区大多数与蝠鲼丰富的热点地区和生态旅游区相邻(如斯里兰卡、印度尼西亚、东非)。识别生态旅游和开发利用相冲突的地区,可以帮助确定保护工作的优先次序。利用生活史特征进行脆弱性分析表明,Manta spp.容易受到捕捞的影响,只能容忍较低的捕捞死亡率;Mobula spp.的数据限制禁止了这种分析。我们的分析支持了以前的研究,表明需要加强保护和监测工作,并建议需要制定国际和可执行的管理政策,以防止种群进一步减少。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验