Length‐weight relationship for sea catfishes (Siluriformes: Ariidae) from the southeastern Gulf of California with new records on maximum length

DS Palacios‐Salgado, JR Flores‐Ortega… - Journal of Applied …, 2018 - Wiley Online Library
Journal of Applied Ichthyology, 2018Wiley Online Library
The parameters of length‐weight relationship (LWR) are presented for seven species of
catfish from the southeastern Gulf of California. Samples were obtained every three months,
in Bahia de Matanchen (using bottom trawl nets consistent of 72 hauls, with mesh sizes of
3.2 cm in the wings and 2.54 cm in the cod‐end) from February to November, 2016 and in
the San Blas estuarine system (using gill nets consistent of 32 hauls, with mesh sizes of 5
cm) from August, 2015 to May, 2016 respectively. The allometric coefficient (b) of LWR …
Summary
The parameters of length‐weight relationship (LWR) are presented for seven species of catfish from the southeastern Gulf of California. Samples were obtained every three months, in Bahia de Matanchen (using bottom trawl nets consistent of 72 hauls, with mesh sizes of 3.2 cm in the wings and 2.54 cm in the cod‐end) from February to November, 2016 and in the San Blas estuarine system (using gill nets consistent of 32 hauls, with mesh sizes of 5 cm) from August, 2015 to May, 2016 respectively. The allometric coefficient (b) of LWR varied from 2.797 for the Cominate Sea Catfish (Occidentarius platypogon (Günther, 1864)) to 3.373 for the Tete Sea Catfish (Ariopsis gilberti (Jordan & Williams, 1895)). Four species reached new records on maximum total length (Tete Sea Catfish, A. gilberti; Widehead Sea Catfish, A. guatemalensis (Günther, 1864); Conguito Sea Catfish, Cathorops liropus (Bristol, 1897); and Curator Sea Catfish, C. raredonae Marceniuk, Betancur‐R, & Acero, 2009). For six of these species this accounts for the first report on estimations of LWR parameters.
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