Relating abundance of purpleback flying squid Sthenoteuthis oualaniensis (Cephalopoda: Ommastrephidae) to environmental parameters using GIS and GAM in south-eastern Arabian Sea

JOURNAL OF NATURAL HISTORY(2018)

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Abstract
The distribution pattern of purpleback flying squid and the relationship between its abundance and environmental variables in the south-eastern Arabian Sea were analysed using a geographical information system (GIS) and a generalised additive model (GAM). Highest abundances were observed during December and January within 10 and 13 degrees N and 71 and 72 degrees E around the Lakshadweep Islands. The mean abundance in the area was 4.21 tonnes/km(2) and the maximum sustainable yield (MSY) was estimated as 0.63 million tonnes. GAM indicated that very high squid abundance was associated with low values of dissolved oxygen (6.01-6.27mg/L), sea surface temperature (28.03-28.62 degrees C), pH (7.75-8.56), salinity (30.42-34.48 psu), chlorophyll-a (0.4-0.6mg/m(3)), zooplankton biomass (0.23-0.64mL/m(3)), and shallow 20 degrees C isotherm (101.2-134.7m) and mixed layer depth (17.8-29.8m). As a carnivore from paralarval stages, S. oualaniensis depends on secondary and tertiary production to sustain its population for which primary production is used up. In the tropical Arabian Sea where temperature differences are not so pronounced, S. oualaniensis distribution was found to be related to a low but very narrow sea surface temperature(SST) band. There is sufficient fishable biomass in the area to possibly launch a new targeted oceanic squid fishery from the western seaboard of India.
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Key words
Sthenoteuthis oualaniensis,Arabian Sea,GIS,GAM,abundance,Indian EEZ
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