Volume 2 - SUPPLEMENT of ABSTRACTS
STOCK ASSESSMENT OF THE LESSEPSIAN MIGRANT PUFFERFISH LAGOCEPHALUS SCELERATUS FROM THE GULF OF SUEZ AND THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA
- Azza El-Ganainy
Fisheries Division, National Institute of Oceanography and Fisheries. EGYPT
azzaelgan@yahoo.com
- Amira Aly
Marine Biology Department, Faculty of Science, Suez Canal University, EGYPT
- Mohamed Ismail Ahmed
Marine Biology Department, Faculty of Science, Suez Canal University, EGYPT
Keywords: Age and growth, Mortalities, Exploitation rate, Lagocephalus sceleratus, Gulf of Suez, Mediterranean Sea.
Abstract
This study principally aims to assess the stock status of the most common invasive pufferfish
species Lagocephalus sceleratus in two different habitats, the native one (Gulf of Suez) and the
new one (Mediterranean Sea). Seasonal samples were collected from the two habitats during winter
2013 and autumn 2014. The morphometric analysis showed that the range and the average
measurements for the most morphometric characters for Gulf of Suez population were higher than
that from the Mediterranean population. The length-weight relationship for L. sceleratus from Gulf
of Suez population was W= 0.013TL2.959, while that from Mediterranean population was W=
0.042TL2.651. The results revealed that the maximum recorded age estimated by length frequency
distribution analysis was seven years old for Gulf of Suez population while it was six years old in
Mediterranean Sea population. For Gulf of Suez population, age group II was the dominated in
the catch, while age group I was the most abundant in the catch of Mediterranean Sea. The
parameters of von Bertalanffy growth equation were (L∞ = 103.71 cm, K= 0.132 for Gulf of Suez
population and L∞ = 89.03, K= 0.2718 for Egyptian Mediterranean population). The estimated
total (Z), natural (M) and fishing (F) mortality coefficients for the Gulf of Suez were 1.01, 0.44
and 0.57 Y
-1
respectively, the same parameters were estimated for the Mediterranean as Z= 0.85,
M= 0.49 and F = 0.41 Y
-1
. The present exploitation rate for the two populations of L. sceleratus
was estimated at 0.56 and 0.48 for Gulf of Suez and Egyptian Mediterranean populations,
respectively. These results show that the stock of L. sceleratus in the Gulf of Suez is slightly over
exploited, while the stock of the same species in the Egyptian Mediterranean is underexploited.