Dozens of pregnant giant devil rays in fishing nets in a village along Mexico’s northern Gulf of California suggest a previously unknown birthing zone in nearby waters.
If further research confirms the possibility, authorities and local fishers should work together to devise a plan that minimizes the risk of negative interactions when pregnant rays migrate there each year in and around April, says study author Leo Chan Gaskins, a doctoral student in marine science and conservation at Duke University’s Nicholas School of the Environment.
“These animals reach sexual maturity very slowly and they have only one pup per litter, so losing even a small number of pregnant females to by-catch can have dire effects on a local population’s birth potential and long-term survival,” Gaskins says.
The largest of the ray species, giant devil rays (Mobula mobular) can grow to 17 feet long and are known for their acrobatic leaps and deep dives. Large numbers of them die as accidental by-catch each year when they become entangled in fishing nets while foraging for krill and other prey in shallow tropical and subtropical waters.
“We still know very little about their global population size, annual movement patterns, and reproductive zones, so the discovery and protection of a previously unknown pupping ground would be good news for conservation,” says Gaskins, whose findings appear in the journal Ecology.
Giant devil ray pups
While taking a field course on community-based marine conservation in the Gulf of California as a Duke undergraduate in April 2014, Gaskins observed dozens of dead giant devil rays tangled in gillnets on the beach of a small-scale fishing community in northern Sonora. Because of the animals’ immense size and weight, the fishers were unable to return them to the sea.
“Every female ray being cut open was pregnant with one pup. I determined the pups were full-term since I was able to revive one that had just been born into a net. We set it free and it swam away over the breaking waves,” Gaskins recalls.
Measurements of the wingspans of two of the dead adult females and one of the dead pups confirmed his belief that the pups were full-term. Scientists estimate the average wing-to-wing width of female giant devil rays when they reach sexual maturity is 2.18 meters; the two Gaskins measured were 1.97 meters and 2.17 meters. The average measurement of a newborn pup is 1 meter; the one he measured was .91 meters.
“These measurements, along with the fact that each boat landed multiple pregnant rays, suggested that the fishers had unknowingly set their nets in a pupping zone,” he says.
Past studies have shown that giant devil rays use the Gulf of California as a mating and feeding zone in spring and early summer, but the presence of a birthing zone there was unknown.
“It makes sense that a pupping zone would be in an area where food is plentiful,” Gaskins says. “The highest density of these rays’ preferred prey, the krill Nyctiphanes simplex, occurs in the northern and central gulf in April, which coincides with my observation.”
Fisher and the fish
Knowing the locations and timing of the rays’ movements in the gulf as they head to and from the pupping grounds would help local fishers, fishery managers, and conservation groups reduce the risk of by-catch, he says.
“This would benefit the fishers and well as the fish,” Gaskins stresses. “Aside from the obvious humane reasons the fishers have for not wanting to harm endangered animals, entangled rays can damage their nets, drive away the desired catch, and greatly decrease their earnings. Ray meat is not valuable in the Gulf of California and only brings in about three pesos per kilo.”
In other parts of the world, especially East Asia, giant devil rays are increasingly the target of harvesting for their gill plates, which go into a pseudo-medicinal tonic called Peng Yu Sai. No market for gill plates exists yet in the Gulf of California fisheries, Gaskins notes, but the prices they can command are extremely high, so putting protection in place now is vital.
The National Science Foundation funded the work.
Source: Duke University