2018
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2018.00269
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Life History, Growth, and Reproductive Biology of Four Mobulid Species in the Bohol Sea, Philippines

Abstract: In light of the global decline of mobulid populations and the necessity for sustainable fisheries management, baseline data for population dynamics were collected from a targeted fishery in the Bohol Sea, Philippines. This study focused on life-history parameters and reproductive cycles of four mobulid rays (Mobula thurstoni, Mobula japanica, Mobula tarapacana, and Manta birostris), and re-estimated their intrinsic population growth rates. Size and reproductive data were collected from 1,509 specimens (30% of … Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(41 citation statements)
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“…Using photogrammetry, I estimated the disc width of two of the pregnant adult female rays to be 1.97 m and 2.17 m, and one of the pups to be 0.91 m. These sizes are similar to disc‐width measurements of this species in the Philippines, with females reaching sexual maturity at an average of 2.18 m, and newborn pups at an average of 1.00 m (Rambahiniarison et al. ). I observed one captured sexually mature male, and every observed female ray being cut open was pregnant with one pup.…”
mentioning
confidence: 80%
“…Using photogrammetry, I estimated the disc width of two of the pregnant adult female rays to be 1.97 m and 2.17 m, and one of the pups to be 0.91 m. These sizes are similar to disc‐width measurements of this species in the Philippines, with females reaching sexual maturity at an average of 2.18 m, and newborn pups at an average of 1.00 m (Rambahiniarison et al. ). I observed one captured sexually mature male, and every observed female ray being cut open was pregnant with one pup.…”
mentioning
confidence: 80%
“…Aging elasmobranchs using vertebrae relies on access to fished specimens and therefore is not appropriate in many wild mobulid ray populations. Direct estimates of growth rate can be obtained in-situ from morphometric measurements of resighted individuals over known time increments, based on visual size estimates (Kitchen-Wheeler et al, 2012;Kashiwagi, 2014;Stevens, 2016), paired laser photogrammetry (Deakos, 2010), or 2,000 (Rambahiniarison et al, 2018;Philippines).…”
Section: Age and Growthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several known aggregation areas exist within the Coral Triangle region, particularly within Indonesia (Marshall et al, 2009;Couturier et al, 2012;Germanov and Marshall, 2014). Manta rays are long-lived, slow to mature, and exhibit low fecundity (Marshall and Bennett, 2010;Stevens, 2016;Rambahiniarison et al, 2018). Owing in part to these conservative life history traits and to overfishing across their range (Dulvy et al, 2014), both Mobula alfredi (Krefft, 1868) and the larger M. birostris (Walbaum, 1792) are currently listed as vulnerable to extinction on the IUCN Red List of Endangered Species (Marshall et al, 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%