Demographics of the endemic and threatened small cyprinid Pethia setnai from the Northern Western Ghats, India
M. SriHari A , Y. Gladston B , S. M. Ajina B , G. B. Sreekanth C , Rajeev Raghavan D and A. K. Jaiswar A EA Department of Fisheries Resource Management, ICAR – Central Institute of Fisheries Education, Mumbai, 400 061, India.
B Fisheries Division, ICAR – Central Island Agricultural Research Institute, Port Blair, Andaman, 744 101, India.
C ICAR – Central Coastal Agricultural Research Institute, Old Goa, 403 402, Goa.
D Department of Fisheries Resource Management, Kerala University of Fisheries and Ocean Studies, Kochi, 682 506, India.
E Corresponding author: akjaiswar@cife.edu.in
Marine and Freshwater Research 71(7) 810-813 https://doi.org/10.1071/MF19122
Submitted: 8 April 2019 Accepted: 5 August 2019 Published: 12 November 2019
Abstract
The indigo barb Pethia setnai is a threatened small cyprinid endemic to the Western Ghats biodiversity hotspot of India. In this study, the length–weight relationship and length–frequency-based population dynamics of this species, which are important prerequisites for effective fisheries management, were investigated for the first time based on specimens collected from the Mhadei River in the northern part of the Western Ghats. Estimated von Bertalanffy growth parameters were as follows: theoretical maximum length, L∞, 70.88 mm; growth coefficient, k, 1.50 year–1; and theoretical age at length 0, t0, –0.016 years. Natural mortality of P. setnai was higher than fishing mortality, and the present exploitation level (0.37) was less than 60% of the predicted maximum exploitation, suggesting that the species is not exploited to a level that is detrimental to the local population.
Additional keywords: aquarium trade, exploitation, indigo barb, mortality, population dynamics.
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