Abstract

BackgroundBlue Land Crab (Cardisoma guanhumi) is one of the most important crustacean species captured and commercialized in Brazil. Although this species is not considered to be threatened with extinction, populations of C. guanhumi are known to be rapidly diminishing due to heavy harvesting pressures and degradation of their natural habitats, highlighting the necessity of developing and implanting management and protection strategies for their populations. There have been no ethnozoological publications that have focused specifically on C. guanhumi, in spite of importance of this type of information for developing efficient management plans of resource utilization. So, the present work describes the ethnoecological aspects of the capture and commercialization of C. guanhumi by a fishing community in northeastern Brazil.MethodsField work was carried out in the municipality of Mucuri, Bahia in Brazil, between the months of January and March/2011 through the use of open semi-structured interviews with all of the crustacean harvesters in city who acknowledged their work in capturing this species, totaling 12 interviewees. The informants were identified through the use of the "snowball" sampling technique. In addition to the interviews themselves, the "guided tour" technique and direct observations was employed.ResultsAccording all the interviewees, the C. guanhumi is popularly called "guaiamum" and is collected in "apicum" zones. They recognize sexual dimorphism in the species based on three morphological characteristics and the harvesters also pointed two stages in the reproductive cycle during the year and another phase mentioned by the interviewees was ecdysis. All of the interviewed affirmed that the size and the quantities C. guanhumi stocks in Mucuri have been diminishing. All of the interviewees agreed that the species and other mangrove resources constituted their principal source of income. The harvesters dedicated three to five days a week to collect Blue Land Crabs and the principal technique utilized for capturing is a trap called a "ratoeira" (rat-trap).ConclusionsThe results of the present work demonstrated that the community retains a vast and important volume of knowledge about C. guanhumi that could subsidize both scientific studies and the elaboration of viable management and conservation strategies for this species.

Highlights

  • Blue Land Crab (Cardisoma guanhumi) is one of the most important crustacean species captured and commercialized in Brazil

  • The interviewees indicated the existence of two basic types of mangrove areas: “enxuto” sites where Blue Land Crabs are found, and the “mole” sites that are preferred by the Mangrove Crab, Ucides cordatus

  • Blue Land Crabs normally construct their galleries in the “apicum” zone where the vegetation is distinct from that encountered in the mangrove swamp itself [47]

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Summary

Introduction

Blue Land Crab (Cardisoma guanhumi) is one of the most important crustacean species captured and commercialized in Brazil This species is not considered to be threatened with extinction, populations of C. guanhumi are known to be rapidly diminishing due to heavy harvesting pressures and degradation of their natural habitats, highlighting the necessity of developing and implanting management and protection strategies for their populations. The ecological services furnished by mangrove swamps are quite numerous and include protecting against coastal erosion, preventing inland flooding, and maintaining coastal biodiversity [4] In addition to their ecological importance, mangrove swamps furnish a wide spectrum of natural products to human populations, such as: wood, fish [5], crustaceans, mollusks, dyes [6], charcoal, tannins, and plant medicines [7], and coastal communities throughout the world depend on these areas for their subsistence [3,8,9]. Brachyura crustaceans are one of the most economically important resources of estuarine communities in Brazil [1,10,11]

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