Fauna associated with the fishing of Arca Zebra (Mollusca Bivalvia: Arcidae) in Venezuela

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Abstract

Arca of the commercial trawling zebra, constitutes fishery importance. carried one of During out the by fishing a the period fishermen resources of nine of with months the the area greatest (May was 2010-August2011) identified economic quantified impact in the northeastern and community described. Venezuela structure The biomass of since the organisms and it forms abundance banks from of the different groups were estimated to perform Abundance-Biomass Comparison Curves (ABC) with the objective of determining the degree of affectation by the trawling activity. A total of3 249 organisms belonging to 130 species were grouped in five Phyla: Mollusca, Annelida, Arthropoda, Echinodermata and Chordata. The Sanders' diversity index was 122.9 with mollusks (70.87) and polychaetes (29.91) as the most diverse taxa. Mollusks had the highest abundance followed by polychaetes, crustaceans, echinoderms and ascidians. Mollusks and echinoderms made the largest contribution to total biomass. The most frequent species were: Mithraculus forceps, Phallucia nigra, Echinometra lucunter, Eunice rubra and Pinctada imbricata. The microgastropods Triphora melanura is recognized as a new record for the area and the polychaete Oenone fulgida, for Venezuela. The ABC curve showed that total abundance of organisms was above total biomass, suggesting that the fishery of Arca zebra has a negative effect on most groups of organisms, mainly on echinoderms, since many of them suffer strong physical damage at the time of extraction, therefore, there is a need to modify the trawl nets, increasing the mesh opening, but without endangering the economic viability of the fishery.

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Díaz-Fermín, R., & Acosta-Balbás, V. (2018). Fauna associated with the fishing of Arca Zebra (Mollusca Bivalvia: Arcidae) in Venezuela. Boletin de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras. INVEMAR. https://doi.org/10.25268/bimc.invemar.2018.47.1.737

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