Abstract

Anthropogenic activities in inland water can cause species loss and displacement. Therefore, there is a need to regularly examine species composition, abundance and diversity of freshwater ecosystem as a means to monitor its health. Ichthyofauna of Ikere-gorge, Iseyin, Oyo State was studied for a period of 24 month, from January 2017 to December 2018. Ikere-gorge was divided into four strata, each comprises three fishing villages. One village in each stratum was randomly selected as sampling site. The catches were sorted into taxonomic groups (species and families) using standard fish identification keys. Forty-one fish species from 13 families were identified in which species richness varied among the sampling villages. Asamu had 34, Agatu had 30, Spillway had 39 and Irawote had 29 species. The freshwater fish species of Nigeria is the richest in West Africa and more than 15% of these fish species are found in Ikere-gorge. Mormyridae family was the most represented with 10 species. Cichlidae was the most abundant by catch and by weight. Sarotherodon galilaeus has the highest abundance by catch and by weight. Gnathonemus brucii was identified as a vulnerable species. The result obtained from this study show that conservation program should be urgently put in place to prevent some fish from extinction. There should be introduction of closed season to allow for proper recruitment of fish population. Likewise, minimum mesh size should be set to allow juvenile and immature fish to escape and allow them to spawn at least once before being vulnerable to gear. There should regulation to set maximum number of fishermen to be allowed to fish at a particular day, this is to reduce fishing pressure.

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