Abstract

The objective of this research was to analyze the role of male gafftopsail catfish, Bagre marinus, in the reproductive process. Twelve monthly samples of male B. marinus were obtained from the small-scale longline fleet operating out of the port of San Pedro in Tabasco, Mexico. Mouthbrooding males were also obtained from the illegal purse seine fishery targeting shoals of B. marinus at the mouth of the Grijalva River. Maximum reproductive activity in B. marinus (July to August) was evinced by the high gonadosomatic index values in June (0.16 ± 0.04, CI 95%), July (0.31 ± 0.03), and August (0.19 ± 0.02), by the high frequency of mature males (more than 40%) caught by the bottom-longline fleet between June and August, and by the presence of shoals of mouthbrooding males at the mouth of the Grijalva River from June to August. The eggs incubated by male B. marinus ranged from 1.4 to 1.9 cm in diameter, 1.9 cm being the most frequent (64.8%). Mouthbrooding males ranged from 36.2 to 44.0 cm total length and could carry from 17 to 40 eggs of 1.9 cm diameter. The reproductive strategy of mouthbrooding gives B. marinus survival advantages in a marine-estuarine environment; however, this strategy also represents a severe risk because shoals of mouthbrooding males are traceable by fishermen, resulting in high mortalities and, consequently, a high loss of eggs and embryos.

Highlights

  • Large estuarine systems are located in the southern Gulf of Mexico

  • Most fishery conservation studies and strategies tend to focus on the females as they usually play the main role in the reproductive process (Trippel 2003); males of the sea catfish family Ariidae play a major role in the reproductive process as they care for their fertilized eggs and fry until complete absorption of the yolk sac by holding them in their mouths (Gomes and Araújo 2004), a strategy known as oral incubation or mouthbrooding

  • One of the main characteristics of B. marinus observed in this research is the temporal and spatial constancy and persistence of its reproductive cycle

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Summary

Introduction

Large estuarine systems are located in the southern Gulf of Mexico These systems, together with Campeche Bank, provide ideal conditions for sustaining a high biological diversity and are important feeding, growth, and breeding areas for many commercially important species (Lara-Lara et al 2008). The characteristics of the coastal zone of the state of Tabasco (Mexico), dominated by the Grijalva-Usumacinta delta system, favor high abundances of INTRODUCCIÓN. Ciencias Marinas, Vol 39, No 1, 2013 fishery resources, among them the gafftopsail catfish, Bagre marinus (Mitchill 1815). This species is targeted by two important fisheries: small-scale coastal multispecies fishing using bottom longlines throughout the year and illegal purse seine fishing during the breeding season (June to August). It is important to consider them in studies addressing the reproductive potential of the species and when formulating conservation measures (Mendoza-Carranza and Hernández-Franyutti 2005)

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