Abstract

West African Ilisha was the third most abundant species of Clupeidae off Benin coastal waters after Sardinella spp and Ethmalosa frimbriata. The fishing effort of these fisheries increased with a dominance of small-sized specimens in the catches. This paper allowed updating some demographic parameters and the exploitation rate of Ilisha africana collected between July 2013 and June 2014 from the coastal waters of Benin for management and conservation of these fisheries. The growth pattern showed a negative allometric growth with an abundance of small-sized specimens. The von Bertalanffy growth function (VBGF) estimations were: L∞= 21.31 cm standard length; K = 1.20 year-1; and t0 = -0.138 year. The total mortality rate (Z), natural mortality rate (M) and fishing mortality rate (F) were 4.040 year-1, 2.27 year-1 and 1.77 year-1 respectively. The Z/K ratio was 3.667 and the exploitation rate (E = F/Z) was 0.44 showing an under exploitation of this species. The estimated potential longevity (tmax) was 2.5 years. In addition, the fisheries management should be devolved from the state to the local level to compel fishermen to take greater responsibility for the sustainability and conservation of the fisheries such as size-limit regulation by gradually increasing fishing gears mesh size.

Highlights

  • The direct consequence of maritime congestion caused by the presence of an important number of local and foreign fleets remains overfishing, one of the big threats on marine fauna and flora in West-Africa (Diouf, 1996 [1])

  • The impact of over fishing is alarming in West Africa where countries are already very poor and depend on water resources for economic growth and food (FAO, 2006 [3]). 75% of artisanal marine fishing catches in Benin consisted of pelagic species which included 60% of the smallest coastal Clupeidae (Gbaguidi, 2000 [4])

  • A pooled sample shows that males were slightly more numerous than females

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Summary

Introduction

The direct consequence of maritime congestion caused by the presence of an important number of local and foreign fleets remains overfishing, one of the big threats on marine fauna and flora in West-Africa (Diouf, 1996 [1]). 75% of artisanal marine fishing catches in Benin consisted of pelagic species which included 60% of the smallest coastal Clupeidae (Gbaguidi, 2000 [4]). The impact of over fishing is alarming in West Africa where countries are already very poor and depend on water resources for economic growth and food (FAO, 2006 [3]). These species are totally free and independent, of the substratum nature (Laloe and Samba, 1991 [5]; Collignon, 1991 [6]). The influence of the environment on their biology and their fluctuating availability and abundance had been highlighted in many fish pools around the world (Belvèze, 1984 [7]; Cury and Fontana, 1988 [8]; Freon, 1988 [9]; Pauly, 1997 [10])

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