O objetivo deste artigo foi investigar o conhecimento ecológico local dos pescadores ao longo de um gradiente latitudinal no litoral de Santa Catarina, sobre o ciclo de vida da tainha Mugil liza (aspectos migratórios, alimentares, reprodutivos e comportamentais). Nossa amostragem abrangeu oito cidades costeiras de Santa Catarina (nove locais de pesca artesanal) e engajou 45 informantes chave (28 -86 anos de idade) a partir de entrevistas semiestruturadas entre Agosto/2011 e Março/2012. Este peixe se alimenta e cresce em sistemas lagunares e estuarinos, migrando para o mar para a reprodução e desova. Pescadores reconhecem a Laguna dos Patos e o rio da Prata como as principais fontes de cardumes. A migração ocorre do Sul para o Norte e as rotas variam em função de condições climáticas e oceanográficas (e.g., baixa temperatura, vento Sul, chuva, correntes e salinidade). Estas condições influenciam a abundância de tainhas (e portanto o sucesso pesqueiro), a sua migração e as paradas em locais como praias, costões rochosos e ilhas. De acordo com os pescadores, a desova das tainhas ocorre ao longo do litoral catarinense e se alimentam em sistemas lagunares e rios, mas também em mar aberto durante a migração. Em conclusão, pescadores possuem um conhecimento detalhado sobre o ciclo de vida da tainha e identificam variações intra e interanuais nas rotas migratórias, um padrão que precisa ser considerado no manejo da pescaria.
Articles • Neotrop. ichthyol. 12
(4)
• Oct-Dec 2014 • https://doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20130156 linkcopiar
Local ecological knowledge of fishers about the life cycle and temporal patterns in the migration of mullet (Mugil liza) in Southern Brazil
Autoria
person Dannieli Firme Herbst
schoolPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. câmpus Trindade, 88010-970 Florianópolis, SC. danniherbst@gmail.com Universidade Federal de Santa CatarinaFlorianópolis, SCPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. câmpus Trindade, 88010-970 Florianópolis, SC. danniherbst@gmail.com
person Natalia Hanazaki
schoolPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. câmpus Trindade, 88010-970 Florianópolis, SC. danniherbst@gmail.com Universidade Federal de Santa CatarinaFlorianópolis, SCPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. câmpus Trindade, 88010-970 Florianópolis, SC. danniherbst@gmail.com schoolDepartamento de Ecologia e Zoologia, ECZ/CCB, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. câmpus Trindade, 88010-970 Florianópolis, SC. natalia@ccb.ufsc.br Universidade Federal de Santa CatarinaFlorianópolis, SCDepartamento de Ecologia e Zoologia, ECZ/CCB, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. câmpus Trindade, 88010-970 Florianópolis, SC. natalia@ccb.ufsc.br
SCIMAGO INSTITUTIONS RANKINGS
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. câmpus Trindade, 88010-970 Florianópolis, SC. danniherbst@gmail.com Universidade Federal de Santa CatarinaFlorianópolis, SCPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. câmpus Trindade, 88010-970 Florianópolis, SC. danniherbst@gmail.com
Departamento de Ecologia e Zoologia, ECZ/CCB, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. câmpus Trindade, 88010-970 Florianópolis, SC. natalia@ccb.ufsc.br Universidade Federal de Santa CatarinaFlorianópolis, SCDepartamento de Ecologia e Zoologia, ECZ/CCB, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. câmpus Trindade, 88010-970 Florianópolis, SC. natalia@ccb.ufsc.br
Figuras | Tabelas
imageFig. 1 Santa Catarina State coast, data collection sites (triangles) and the number of interviewed fishermen (in parenthesis; total N=45). open_in_new

imageFig. 2 The life cycle of the mullet Mugil liza following local ecological knowledge of fishers from Santa Catarina State: a) Exit of mullets from 'criadouros' or breeding sites (lagoons and estuaries) to the sea (n= 45); b) Migration of mullets known as 'corrida' (run) and recurrent gathering with smaller schools (schooling or thickening process). The outlined map represents the Santa Catarina State coastline and main stopping/fishing sites for mullets. Arrows corresponds to our data-collection sites, which were indicated as main fishing locations; c) Outline of Santa Catarina State island (Florianópolis city) and Bombinhas as most external (to the East) coastal areas and where larger captures of mullets occurs during the fishing season; d) Male and female spawning with respective milky ('ova leiteira') and yellowish ('ova amarela') gonads. According to most of our informants, after fecundation female mullets may hold their eggs under their scales until they become juvenile; e) Northward migration to São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro states, following by their (adults plus juveniles) southward return to lagoons and estuaries; f) Entrance of adult mullets and recruitment of juveniles in lagoons and estuaries; g) Growth and feeding of adults and juveniles in lagoons and estuaries. open_in_new

imageFig. 3 Percentage of the interviewed fishers (n=45) that cited the month when mullet exiting lagoons/estuaries ('criadouros') for migration, spawning and return. Some fishermen cited more than one month for each event, five did not knew about when spawning occurred and seven when mullets returned to the lagoons/estuaries. open_in_new

imageFig. 4 Abdominal checking of mullet (Mugil liza) sex. a) Female: yellow eggs (n=27) through the urogenital orifice, and b) Male: white eggs/sperm (n=36) through the urogenital orifice. open_in_new

imageFig. 5 a) Whole muscular stomach (gizzard) and b) Opened gizzard, with sand and mud (in March), both of mullet (Mugil liza). open_in_new

table_chartTable 1
Questions of the semi-structured protocol with the main points of investigation.
| Ecological aspects addressed | Questions |
|---|---|
| Migration | Why mullets migrate? Whence and whither? When they go out to the sea? Is there a route where the school goes? |
| What are the main fishing sites in coastal Santa Catarina State? What is the ideal condition for mullet migration? | |
| Reproduction | Are there differences between male and female? How do you know which is male and which is female? When is |
| the breeding season? How far in life it becomes mature (adult, ready to breed)? What size they have at the | |
| moment? How is the reproductive process? How long it stays with eggs? When and how the eggs are released? | |
| Where do they spawn? What is the best condition for mullet spawning? | |
| Feeding | What do they eat? When and where they feed? |
| Interactions | How does mullets interact (behaviors within the group)? They interact with other species? Do you know some |
| sort of parasite or disease in mullets? |
table_chartTable 2
Environmental conditions affecting mullet migration, according to 45 interviewed fishers in Santa Catarina State, Brazil.
| Environmental condition | Citations | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|
| South wind (low temperatures) | ‘The more wind and colder, more the mullet runs’ (Imbituba fisher, 39 years old). ‘If | ||
| 38 | you have south wind and sea current that helps, in 5-8 days the mullet is on the coast | ||
| of Santa Catarina State’ (Pinheira fisher, 75 years old) | |||
| Weak north/northeast wind | 35 | ‘With south wind they come out, but when that stops and turns to northeast wind | |
| they seek the coast’ (Garopaba fisher, 72 years old) | |||
| Southwest or offshore wind (‘minuano’ | 08 | ‘What send the fish to the north is the offshore wind, west wind, because further | |
| or ‘terral’) | south it gets too cold’ (São Francisco do Sul fisher, 33 years old) | ||
| Rebojo (agitated sea) | 07 | ‘When it hits the Rebojo, bad weather, the mullet takes to travel’ (São Francisco do | |
| Sul fisher, 57 years old) | |||
| Rain | 02 | ‘When storm happens then the fish ends, they pass far from the coast’ (Garopaba | |
| fisher, 56 years old) | |||
| Full moon (full tide) | 02 | ‘If it’s a full moon with south wind and is May 1st to 15th the mullet comes’ (Pinheira | |
| fisher, 42 years old) | |||
| New moon | 01 | ‘The strength of the new moon makes the mullet leave outward at Rio Grande [Patos | |
| Lagoon]’. (São Francisco do Sul fisher, 57 years old) |
table_chartTable 3
Reasons for mullet 'paradas' (stops) in rocky shores, islands, beaches and open sea, according to 29 key-informant fishers from Santa Catarina State (Brazil) knowledgeable of such ecological traits.
| Reason for stop | Citations | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Resting | 15 | ‘They stop to rest, and keep playing and jumping’ (São Francisco do Sul fisher, 57 years old) | |
| Spawning | 14 | ‘They only stop where the bottom has stone or coral, slime to eat. And in the slime of the | |
| stones remains only those little heads [eggs]’ (Pinheira fisher, 42 years old) | |||
| Feeding | 12 | ‘To eat, because the waters hit the algae and is best for them to eat and to create fat’ | |
| (Bombinhas fisher, 55 years old) | |||
| Warm temperature | 04 | ‘They wait for the wind. With north wind is difficult to leave the rocky shore, but when the | |
| south wind comes they leave’ (Pântano do Sul fisher, 68 years old) | |||
| Protection from predators | 03 | ‘They seek refuge where the fishers cannot catch them. They can be stopped for months on | |
| the rocky shores, if nobody can fish them’ (Barra da Lagoa fisher, 48 years old). ‘They stop | |||
| afraid of predators, dolphins, other fish’ (Bombinhas fisher, 86 years old) |
table_chartTable 4
Descriptions of 45 fishers of Santa Catarina State about the reproductive aspects of mullet (Mugil liza).
| Aspects about the reproduction | Citations | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|
| a) | Reproductive process | 12 | ‘The mullet gets the belly-up, silver. Then you see from afar, they rub the belly |
| one on another’ (Bombinhas fisher, 55 years old); ‘the meeting of eggs and | |||
| sperm is into the water, which will later stick to the scales of the fish’ (Barra | |||
| da Lagoa fisher, 39 years old). | |||
| b) | Different gonadal stages | 03 | At the start of fishing the gonad is yellowish and thin. At the end of June the |
| gonads are quite larger and thicker. By August the gonads lose flavor and are | |||
| redder and in September the roes are hatch under the fish scales. November | |||
| there is no gonads or with a very thin roe to be filled again in April and May, | |||
| when we start fishing again’(São Francisco do Sul fisher, 54 years); ‘By May | |||
| the gonad is yellow, like a mass, by June you eat the little grains and by | |||
| August it is already bad’ (Bombinhas fisher, 86 years old). | |||
| c) | Spawning sites | Sea (17); River and | ‘They spawn in rocky shores, but also within the lagoon. Those who enter in |
| lagoon (3); | the lagoon hide in the grass to breed, and nobody sees them’ (Bombinhas | ||
| Sea, river and lagoon | fisher, 62 years old); ‘[…] when they do not find a river, they spawn in the | ||
| (19) | beach’ (Bombinhas fisher, 86 years old). | ||
| d) | Spawning process | 30 | ‘The mullet shivers the scales and the cubs are down the scales until they reach |
| a stage that they can feed and protect themselves. She lets out a protection, oozing, gelatinous’ (Pantano do Sul Fisher, 52 years); ‘The mullet was smeared, half red, and it was different, like whity and burst as if a varicose vein. In the whole body. They put [the spawn] down the scales to protect from other fish’ (Barra da Lagoa fisher, 48 years); ‘She seeks those grasses and stays there, quietly, hatching. It’s rare, you see one in 1000’ (São Francisco do Sul fisher, 74 years); ‘There are two or three little eggs under each scale […]. If you look well you can see even the little eyes of the juveniles […] She gets all soft, silly, just moved her mouth (Bombinhas fisher, 79 years); ‘I've seen the roes on the scales, but they say it is a disease that occurs in the mullet…’ (Pântano do Sul fisher, 59 years). | |||
table_chartTable 5
Places where the juveniles live after spawning, according to 45 interviewed fishers in Santa Catarina State, Brazil (ten of our informants did not knew about this particular ecological process).
| Breeding locations | Citations | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Return to Patos Lagoon | 15 | ‘Juveniles go along with their mother, to enter the lagoon back’ (Garopaba fisher, 44 years | |
| old). | |||
| Return to rivers and lagoons | 10 | ‘The mullet spawns and then the juveniles go back to the same place where the mother left, | |
| should be a memory that stays with the juvenile (Pântano do Sul fisher, 52 years old). | |||
| Live in rivers and lagoons | 10 | ‘The mullet spawns and juveniles go to nearest mangroves, rivers and lagoons (Pântano do Sul | |
| close to the spawning site | fisher, 53 years old). |
table_chartTable 6
Food items in mullet diet, according to 45 interviewed fishers in Santa Catarina State, Brazil (six of our informants did not knew about this particular ecological process).
| Food item | Citations | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sand and mud | 21 | ‘They eat sand and mud. When we fished in the lagoon it tastes like mud. During the migration, | |
| Slime, sludge and peri grass | they clean up at sea, and then is delicious’ (Pinheira fisher, 75 years old). | ||
| 21 | ‘They eat in the peri grass’ (Pântano do Sul fisher, 78 years old). ‘They stay nibbling the slime | ||
| (Cyperaceae, common in the | and sludge from rocky shores and fishing nets’ (Pântano do Sul fisher, 29 years old). | ||
| lagoon margins) | |||
| Boat oil | 11 | ‘In polluted places, they suck the oil, especially the boat oil and they acquire this taste to the | |
| flesh’ (Barra da Lagoa fisher, 48 years old). | |||
| Algae | 10 | ‘They eat sea algae, plankton, slime foam on the rocky shores’ (São Francisco do Sul fisher, 83 | |
| years old). | |||
| Plankton | 08 | ‘They eat plankton, this mixture of small things’ (Barra da Lagoa fisher, 39 years old); ‘When | |
| they stop at the shore they eat plankton’ (Pântano do Sul fisher, 53 years old). | |||
| Invertebrates and larvae | 05 | ‘I've seen it stops at the beach and eat shellfish larvae’ (São Francisco do Sul fisher, 57 years | |
| old); ‘They eat mole crabs (Emerita brasiliensis) and small animals’ (Garopaba fisher, 56 years | |||
| old) |
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