Biology, population structure and fishery of jumbo flying squid (Dosidicus gigas) in Peru

Authors

  • Jorge Csirke Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Juan Argüelles Torres Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Ana Renza Paola Alegre Norza Sior Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Patricia Ayón Dejo Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Marilú Bouchon Corrales Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Gladis Castillo Mendoza Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Ramiro Castillo Valderrama Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Rosario Cisneros Burga Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Renato Guevara Carrasco Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Luis Wencheng Lau Medrano Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Luis Mariátegui Rosales Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Carlos Martín Salazar Céspedes Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Ricardo Tafur Jiménez Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Edgar Josymar Torrejón Magallanes Instituto del Mar del Perú
  • Carmen Yamashiro Guinoza Instituto del Mar del Perú

Keywords:

Dosidicus gigas, Jumbo flying squid, Biology, Population subunits, Fishery, Peru

Abstract

Jumbo flying squid (Dosidicus gigas) is found in high abundance along the whole Peruvian coast from 10 to more than 500 nautical miles from the coast. It performs diel vertical migrations from 0 to more than 650 m of depth, with regular inshore-offshore ontogenetic migrations and less regular latitudinal migrations of several hundred nautical miles. It is a very aggressive predator, having a wide food spectrum with predominance, in the last 14 years, of cephalopods (42.33%, by weight) and the mesopelagic fishes Vinciguerria lucetia (13.05%) and Myctophidae (12.38%). Observed differences in their size at sexual maturity, growth and distribution areas suggests that there are at least three phenotypic groups or population subunits off Peru. Their size frequency distribution in catches by both artisanal and industrial fleets in Peruvian waters has been highly variable, with a significant shift to much larger sizes that started in 2000 and became evident in 2001. Since then, squids caught in Peruvian waters have generally been much larger than those caught in the adjacent high seas. The Peruvian squid fishery developed rapidly during the early 1990s with increased catches by a licensed foreign industrial jigger fleet and a rapidly expanding local artisanal fishery that gradually phased out the industrial fishery. Total Peruvian catches of jumbo flying squid peaked at 556 thousand tons in 2014, all taken by local artisanal fleets. The stock or stocks of jumbo flying squid in Peruvian waters are considered to be underexploited or moderately exploited, and the assessments are based on biomass estimates from acoustic surveys combined with surplus production modelling. The suitability of these and other stock assessment methods is discussed giving particular attention to the observed population structure, the presence of three phenotypic groups or possible stock subunits, as well as other characteristics of jumbo flying squid off Peru and what they may imply for the assessment and management of this fishery.

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Published

2018-12-10

How to Cite

Csirke, J., Argüelles Torres, J., Alegre Norza Sior, A. R. P., Ayón Dejo, P., Bouchon Corrales, M., Castillo Mendoza, G., Castillo Valderrama, R., Cisneros Burga, R., Guevara Carrasco, R., Lau Medrano, L. W., Mariátegui Rosales, L., Salazar Céspedes, C. M., Tafur Jiménez, R., Torrejón Magallanes, E. J., & Yamashiro Guinoza, C. (2018). Biology, population structure and fishery of jumbo flying squid (Dosidicus gigas) in Peru. Boletin Instituto Del Mar Del Perú, 33(2), 302–364. Retrieved from https://revistas.imarpe.gob.pe/index.php/boletin/article/view/46

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Artículos originales