Dissertação
Influência da variabilidade ambiental marinha na captura da sardinha-verdadeira Sardinella brasiliensis (Steindachner, 1879) no Sul do Brasil
Fecha
2013-01-25Registro en:
MESQUITA, Sherida Ferreira Pinheiro de. Influence of the marine environmental variability on the capture of the brazilian sardine Sardinella brasiliensis (Steindachner, 1879) in Southern Brazil. 2013. 46 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Ciencias Biológicas) - Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria, 2013.
Autor
Mesquita, Sherida Ferreira Pinheiro de
Institución
Resumen
Sardinella brasiliensis is a marine pelagic fish that belongs to a single fish stock
confined at the Brazilian coast, occurs from Rio de Janeiro (22 ° S) to Santa Catarina (29 ° S)
states in southern Brazil. Environmental variables influence on the biology of fishes in
different ways. Here we investigate the influence of marine environmental variability on the
Catch per Unit of Effort (CPUE) of S. brasiliensis in southern Brazil for 10 years. We tested
the correlation of the peaks of oscillation of CPUE with variables such as the sea surface
temperature (SST), chlorophyll concentration and the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI).
CPUE data were obtained from Fisheries Statistics Bulletins, from the University of Vale do
Itajai (UNIVALI). The SST data come from the NOAA Pathfinder project, the chlorophyll
concentration (CC) from the NASA Giovanni database and the SOI from the Australian
Bureau of Meteorology database. We divided the study area into four areas, confined at the
southern coast of Brazil down to the 100 m isobath. We calculated the anomalies of sea
surface temperature (SSTA). All time series were treated using linear interpolation for
missing points, a 3-point moving average filter, then submitted to cross-correlation analysis
and wavelet transform. We found that CPUE and SST are inversely correlated while CPUE
and CC are directly correlated. There is an annual cycle of CC and biannual for SSTA. The
wavelet transform CPUE shows a strong signal in the period of 16 months, all along the time
series. In the years 2001 to 2002 and from 2003 to 2006, the period of 21 months is also
important and strong. Knowing that the sardine adult stock follows the dynamics of the Brazil
Coastal Current, we suggest greater stability of the current in terms of more positive SSTAs
and CCs favoring higher spawns more successful and improve conditions for recruitment of S.
brasiliensis adult stock to a year later.