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1.
J Fish Biol ; 96(3): 601-616, 2020 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31894580

ABSTRACT

The Portuguese dogfish Centroscymnus coelolepis is a wide-ranging deep-water shark and a common by-catch component of the catches of several mid- to deep-water fisheries. In the present study, two new records from the south-western Atlantic Ocean are reported based on specimens caught by bottom-longline fishing vessels operating in the Argentinean-Uruguayan Common Fishing Zone. Species identification based on morphology and detailed morphometrics, as well as molecular data are presented for one of the specimens. The distribution of the species over the south-western Atlantic is discussed on the basis of the available bibliography and a thorough revision of museum collections. The records presented here expand the species' previously acknowledged distribution southwards, from around 21° S to at least 38° S, suggesting it occurs continuously along the shelf break of eastern South America. However, given the limited access to specimens of deep-water sharks in the region, the abundance and real extent of C. coelolepis distribution in the south-western Atlantic as well as its interaction with deep-water fisheries remain to be fully assessed.


Subject(s)
Animal Distribution , Dogfish/anatomy & histology , Dogfish/physiology , Animals , Atlantic Ocean , Fisheries , Portugal , South America
2.
J Fish Biol ; 95(3): 753-771, 2019 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31140602

ABSTRACT

Using the last taxonomic review of chondrichthyans of the world, we selected the species distributed in the north-western Atlantic Ocean (NWA) and compared it with the available published literature related to the class Chondrichthyes in the Venezuelan exclusive economic zone. We also revised information from worldwide databases such as: FAO (NWA-31 area), GBIF, iSpecies, IUCN and OBIS, as well as available museum collection databases. The taxonomic validity was checked using the Catalogue of Fishes of the California Academy of Sciences and recent references. The past published Venezuelan lists of chondrichthyans combined included nine orders, 30 families and 108 species. The updated list with 12 orders, 36 families and 122 species increased by three new orders, six families, three shark genera, nine shark species (one replacing another species), one chimaera genus, two chimaera species, three batoid genera and six batoid species (two replacing other species). Four holotype specimens (two sharks and two rays) are deposited in Venezuelan Museums. Most of the species have an IUCN conservation status, including four species catalogued as Critically Endangered, six as Endangered and 18 species as Vulnerable. Deep-sea fisheries, scientific exploration and taxonomic/genetic revisions might add future increments to the Venezuelan chondrichthyan list.


Subject(s)
Sharks/classification , Skates, Fish/classification , Animals , Atlantic Ocean , Databases, Factual , Endangered Species , Museums , Phylogeny , Venezuela
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