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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Changes in spawning-stock structure and recruitment pattern of red mullet, Mullus barbatus, after a trawl ban in the Gulf of Castellammare (central Mediterranean Sea)

Germana GarofaloFabio BadalamentiMichele GristinaTomaso FortibuoniCarlo PipitoneP. RizzoGiovanni D’annaPaola GianguzzaFrancesco Fiorentino

subject

0106 biological sciencesMullus barbatusMediterranean climateRed mulletFishingPopulationAquatic ScienceOceanography01 natural sciencesMediterranean sea14. Life underwatereducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsStock (geology)education.field_of_studyEcologybiology010604 marine biology & hydrobiology04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesbiology.organism_classificationFisherySea surface temperatureGeographyOceanography040102 fisheries0401 agriculture forestry and fisheries

description

Abstract Fiorentino, F., Badalamenti, F., D’Anna, G., Garofalo, G., Gianguzza, P., Gristina, M., Pipitone, C., Rizzo, P., and Fortibuoni, T. 2008. Changes in spawning-stock structure and recruitment pattern of red mullet, Mullus barbatus, after a trawl ban in the Gulf of Castellammare (central Mediterranean Sea). – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 65: 1175–1183. The increase in biomass of red mullet, Mullus barbatus, in the Gulf of Castellammare (northwestern Sicily, central Mediterranean) after a 14-year trawl ban, prompted us to compare the spawning-stock structure and the recruitment pattern before and after the closure. Datasets obtained from three experimental trawl surveys were available before the ban (April and September 1985; April–May 1986) and four post-ban (September and November 2004; March and May 2005). Spawning-stock biomass increased significantly after the ban. Moreover, females at depths >50 m in the post-ban period were larger than those collected before the ban at the same depth. The recruitment pattern of the population also changed. Notably, recruit numbers increased and recruitment occurs over a broader period. The increase in biomass after the trawl ban seems to be the result of a combination of different processes, mainly associated with the lowering of fishing mortality. A positive trend in sea surface temperature in the area may have played a role too.

https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsn104