Composition and abundance of deep-water crustaceans in the Southwest Indian Ocean
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Date
2015Author
Everett, B.I.
Groeneveld, J.C.
Fennessy, S.T.
Dias, N.
Filipe, O.
Zacarias, L.
c, M. Igulu
Kuguru, B.
Kimani, E.
Munga, C.N.
Rabarison, G.A.
Razafindrakoto, H.
Yemane, D.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Expanding coastal fisheries into deeper waters is frequently tabled as an option to increase harvests from
the sea in the Southwest Indian Ocean. In this region, only Mozambique and South Africa have established deep-water trawl fisheries for mixed crustaceans. To investigate the fishery potential of deep shelf
waters over a broader geographical extent, four bottom trawl surveys were undertaken, in Madagascar,
Mozambique, Tanzania and Kenya, respectively, in 2011e2012. Teleosts dominated catches in all surveys
(59e74% of total catches) and depths. Crustaceans made up 15% of the catch in Mozambique and
Madagascar, but only 6% in Kenya and Tanzania, where elasmobranchs (18%) and other invertebrates (11
e15%) were more abundant. A generalized linear model was constructed to quantify the effects of
country, depth and day/night on the abundance of four common crustacean species. Abundance of
Haliporoides triarthrus and Metanephrops mozambicus declined from south (Madagascar, Mozambique) to
north (Kenya, Tanzania), but Heterocarpus woodmasoni was more abundant in Madagascar, Tanzania and
Kenya. Chaceon macphersoni and H. triarthrus abundance increased up to 600 m depth, whereas
M. mozambicus and H. woodmasoni peaked shallower, at 350e500 m. Crustacean catch composition in
Mozambique was strikingly similar to commercial landings in eastern South Africa, supporting a distinct
sub-region for fisheries management, but differed markedly across the Mozambique Channel. Deepwater crustaceans were less abundant in Kenya and Tanzania, with limited commercial appeal. New
deep-water trawl fisheries will have to contend with significant teleost bycatch.