Acceso abierto·Documento·2022·Inglés

Demographics and dynamics of the world’s largest known population of oceanic manta rays Mobula birostris in coastal Ecuador

K Harty; Michel Guerrero; AM Knochel; GMW Stevens; Andrea D. Marshall; Katherine B. Burgess; Joshua D. Stewart

Openalex

Resumen

Information on the life history and demographics of oceanic manta rays Mobula birostris remains scarce. Using photo-ID data, we describe the demographic structure, population size, and possible environmental drivers of the seasonal occurrence of M. birostris at Isla de la Plata and Bajo Copé, Ecuador. We identified a total of 2803 individuals from 3322 encounters over a period of 14 yr (2005-2018). The population sampled at these sites was significantly biased towards males (sex ratio 1F:1.67M) and only 12.9% of individuals were resighted. We used mark-resight models to estimate demographic parameters of the population, including superpopulation size, survival probability, entry/recruitment probability, and detection probability. We also evaluated how these parameters were related to environmental predictors, such as El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), sea surface temperature (SST), and chlorophyll a (chl a) . Mark-resight analyses indicated that SST, chl a , time, and sex, but not ENSO, were important predictors of estimated population parameters. Entry probability peaked in 2012, which coincided with the lowest SST and highest chl a concentrations. The best-fit mark-resight model estimated a superpopulation size of 22316 individuals, with annual estimated abundances of 949-7650 females and 5226-9340 males. Localised sampling of this highly mobile species limits the interpretations of mark-resight analyses, but provides lower bounds for total abundance that indicate the population of M. birostris in coastal Ecuador and Peru is likely the largest in the world.

Cómo citar

K Harty, & Michel Guerrero, & AM Knochel, & GMW Stevens, & Andrea D. Marshall, & Katherine B. Burgess, & Joshua D. Stewart (2022). Demographics and dynamics of the world’s largest known population of oceanic manta rays Mobula birostris in coastal Ecuador. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps14189