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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Present state and perspectives for the southern Brazil shelf demersal fisheries

Manuel Haimovici
- 01 Aug 1998 - 
- Vol. 5, Iss: 4, pp 277-289
TLDR
The demersal fish stocks in southern Brazil were assessed from landings and catchper-unit effort data trends between 1975 and 1994, available information on the life history patterns, and population dynamics of the most important species.
Abstract
The demersal fish stocks in southern Brazil were assessed from landings and catchper-unit effort data trends between 1975 and 1994, available information on the life history patterns, and population dynamics of the most important species. The fishing gears, mostly otter and pair bottom trawls in the 1970s, diversified towards double-rig trawls for fish and shrimp and bottom gill nets in the mid 1980s, and bottom longlines in the upper slope in the early 1990s. There were also some less successful attempts with traps for fish and crabs. The demersal fisheries are more intensive in winter when migratory species move northward, associated with the seasonal displacement of the western boundary of the Subtropical Convergence. Landings between 1975 and 1994 were mostly of sciaenid fishes (>70%) and elasmobranchs (10%) and oscillated around 59 000 t. There was not a decrease in total landings but a shift from more to less exploited stocks. Since 1989, 4% of the landings came from depleted stocks of Pagrus pagrus (L.), Netuma barba (Lacepede), Pogonias cromis (L.) and Rhinobatos horkelli (Muller & Henle); 37% from overexploited stocks: Micropogonias furnieri (Desmarest), Paralichthys patagonicus Jordan, Squatina guggenheim Marini, and Galeorhinus galeus (L.); 24% from heavily exploited stocks of Umbrina canosai Berg, and Macrodon ancylodon (Bloch & Schneider); and 35% of Cynoscion guatucupa (Cuvier) and small stocks with unclear status. The demersal fisheries are virtually unmanaged and future landings are expected to decrease if fishing pressure remains high. Effective management will require the participation of all three countries in the region because most of the stocks fished in southern Brazil are shared with Uruguay and Argentina.

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Citations
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TL;DR: It appears that direct and indirect effects of fishing activities may pose a threat to these species in Brazilian waters, especially bottom trawl and gill nets.
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TL;DR: Stable isotope results suggest that the availability of discards from pelagic fisheries in the SW Atlantic Ocean lead to an artificially and poorly structured seabird community, with most species utilizing the same food resource.
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Fisheries catches and the carrying capacity of marine ecosystems in southern Brazil

TL;DR: In this paper, the carrying capacity of marine shelf ecosystems in southern Brazil for harvestable species is analyzed by quantifying the amount of available primary production appropriated by fisheries catches, evaluating the trend in the mean trophic level of fisheries, and simulating the ecosystem effects of "fishing down the food web" in an intensively exploited shelf region.
Book ChapterDOI

The Convergence Ecosystem in the Southwest Atlantic

TL;DR: In this article, the authors considered a large marine ecosystem in the SW Atlantic between 23°S and 55°S (Cabo Frio) and showed that high variability of physico-chemical and biological attributes occurs at the shelf and slope system between approximately 30°S to 40°S due to the influence of horizontal, vertical, and seasonal mixing processes among TW, SACW, SAW, and large continental runoff.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Freshwater outflow and Subtropical Convergence influence on phytoplankton biomass on the southern Brazilian continental shelf

TL;DR: In this article, the role of different continental shelf water masses on inorganic nutrient levels and on phytoplankton biomass along the southern Brazilian coast during October 1987 and September 1988 was discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Demersal bony fish of the outer shelf and upper slope of the southern Brazil Subtropical Convergence Ecosystem

TL;DR: The north-south shift of the western boundary of the Subtropical Convergence appears to be mainly responsible for the seasonal changes in abundance of the species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distribuição da fauna de peixes demersais e ecologia dos Sciaenidae da plataforma continental brasileira, entre as latitudes 29º21'S (Tôrres) e 33º41'S (Chuí)

TL;DR: As Sciaenidae family shows to be the most important predominant group each species is studied in detail with reference to its distribution and relative abundance, as well as its spatial and temporal variations according to the abiotic environment.
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