Abstract

Cartilaginous fish are commonly recognized as key species in marine ecosystems for their fundamental ecological role as top predators. Nevertheless, effective management plans for cartilaginous fish are still missing, due to the lack of knowledge on their abundance, distribution or even life-history. In this regard, this paper aims at providing new information on the life-history traits, such as age, maturity, reproductive period, in addition to diet characteristics of eleven rare cartilaginous fish inhabiting the Central-Western Mediterranean Sea belonging to the orders Chimaeriformes (Chimaera monstrosa), Hexanchiformes (Heptranchias perlo and Hexanchus griseus), Myliobatiformes (Aetomylaeus bovinus and Myliobatis aquila), Rajiformes (Dipturus nidarosiensis and Leucoraja circularis), Squaliformes (Centrophorus uyato, Dalatias licha and Oxynotus centrina) and Torpediniformes (Tetronarce nobiliana), useful for their assessment and for future management actions. Particularly, the present paper provides for the first time the age estimation of D. nidarosienis and L. circularis which were both found capable of becoming older than ten years. In addition, the present study updates the sizes of first maturity of C. uyato and D. licha, which appeared to be capable of reproducing earlier than what was previously hypothesized, representing very valuable information for a better understanding of these rare species populations status and, eventually, their conservation. On the basis of the stomach content analysis, it was possible to identify five different predator groups.

Highlights

  • Marine ecosystems represent Earth’s largest biodiversity reservoirs [1], providing a wide range of contributions to human well-being, which collectively go under the name of Marine Ecosystem Services [2,3]

  • The aim of this work is to provide new and updated information on eleven cartilaginous fish species belonging to the orders Chimaeriformes (Chimaera monstrosa), Hexanchiformes (Heptranchias perlo and Hexanchus griseus), Myliobatiformes (Aetomylaeus bovinus and Myliobatis aquila), Rajiformes (Dipturus nidarosiensis and Leucoraja circularis), Squaliformes (Centrophorus uyato, Dalatias licha, Oxynotus centrina) and Torpediniformes (Tetronarce nobiliana), inhabiting the seas surrounding Sardinia (Central-Western Mediterranean)

  • Specimens were collected between 2007 and 2021 in the seas around Sardinia (CentralWestern Mediterranean Sea, FAO GFCM Geographical subarea 11) at depths ranging between 29 and 1573 m (Figure 1) during the experimental trawl surveys MEDITS (MEDiterranean International Trawl Survey; 102 hauls per year held during summer months; [25]) and the Deep Trawl campaign held by the University of Cagliari (119 hauls in total, distributed during the year)

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Summary

Introduction

Marine ecosystems represent Earth’s largest biodiversity reservoirs [1], providing a wide range of contributions to human well-being, which collectively go under the name of Marine Ecosystem Services [2,3] Due to this high resource availability, the human pressure on marine ecosystems is constantly rising, negatively impacting their biodiversity [4,5,6]. In this context, the Mediterranean Sea is considered, at the same time, a biodiversity hotspot and one of the most threatened marine areas in the world [7,8,9,10]. Due to their k-selected life-history traits, cartilaginous fish are vulnerable to overfishing, habitat deterioration and to the modifications in the biological communities’

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