Abstract

The Baraka's whipray (Maculabatis ambigua) is a major constituent of small-scale fisheries catch in the south-western Indian Ocean. Despite this, little is known of its life-history or exploitation status. We provide the first estimates of crucial life-history parameters and the maximum intrinsic population growth rate rmax , using specimens collected from small-scale fisheries landings in Kenya, Zanzibar and Madagascar (with northern Madagascar representing a range extension for this species). We assess the relative risk of overexploitation by combining rmax with estimates of total Z, fishing F, and natural M mortality, and an estimate of the exploitation ratio E. The data indicate that Baraka's whipray is a medium-sized, fast-growing, early maturing species, with a relatively long lifespan. This results in a high rmax relative to many other elasmobranchs, which when combined with estimates of F suggests that the species is not at imminent risk of extinction. Yet, estimates of exploitation ratio E indicate likely overfishing for the species, with full recruitment to the fishery being post-maturation and exploitation occurring across a broad range of age and size classes. Thus, Baraka's whipray is unlikely to be biologically sustainable in the face of current fisheries pressures. This paper makes an important contribution to filling the gap in available data and is a step towards developing evidence-based fisheries management for this species. Further, it demonstrates a simple and widely applicable framework for assessment of data-poor elasmobranch exploitation status and extinction risk.

Highlights

  • Elasmobranchs generally display slow growth, late maturity and low fecundity (Compagno, 1990)

  • There are no data for the annual reproductive output of Baraka's whipray, we provided a plausible estimate of b from related species, as has been done for other data-poor species (D'Alberto et al, 2019; Pardo et al, 2016a)

  • We provide the first estimates for key life-history parameters, extinction risk and exploitation status of the recently described and widely fished Baraka's whipray

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Elasmobranchs (sharks and rays) generally display slow growth, late maturity and low fecundity (Compagno, 1990) These life-history traits mean elasmobranchs are intrinsically sensitive to non-natural mortalities and limits their recovery potential (Dulvy et al, 2014a). Recent vulnerability assessments based on small-scale fisheries landings suggest that several coastal rays, primarily whiptail stingrays (Family Dasyatidae), may be at risk across the SWIO (Temple et al, 2019). Many of these species have either limited or no regional life-history data available. The 95% confidence interval (95%CI) of the linear models was derived using bootstrapping with replacement for 10,000 iterations

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| RESULTS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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