| Literature DB >> 28911322 |
Heitor de Oliveira Braga1,2, Miguel Ângelo Pardal3, Ulisses Miranda Azeiteiro4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With the present difficulties in the conservation of sardines in the North Atlantic, it is important to investigate the local ecological knowledge (LEK) of fishermen about the biology and ecology of these fish. The ethnoecological data of European pilchard provided by local fishermen can be of importance for the management and conservation of this fishery resource. Thus, the present study recorded the ethnoecological knowledge of S. pilchardus in the traditional fishing community of Peniche, Portugal.Entities:
Keywords: Ethnoecology; European pilchard; Fishermen; Folk knowledge; Participatory management
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28911322 PMCID: PMC5599890 DOI: 10.1186/s13002-017-0181-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 2.733
Fig. 1Map of the study area, highlighting the fishing port and the city center of Peniche where the interviews were conducted in Portugal. Credits: B Zucherato
Fig. 2a Main area of the fishing port of Peniche, Portugal where the interviews with the fishermen were carried out. b A fisherman doing maintenance of purse seine nets. Credits: HO Braga. (Images published under previous consent of the participants)
Probable areas of sardines displacement along the Portuguese Coast according to the fishermen of Peniche
| Fishing spots in Portugal | Number of times cited by fishermen |
|---|---|
| Figueira da Foz | 27 |
| Algarve | 25 |
| Nazaré | 19 |
| Ericeira | 15 |
| Sesimbra | 12 |
| Sines | 11 |
| Aveiro, Setúbal and Portimão | 8 |
| Cape Roca | 7 |
| São Pedro de Moel and Matosinhos | 4 |
| Viana de Castelo, Póvoa de Varzim, Olhão and Santa Cruz | 3 |
| Cascaiz and Leixões | 2 |
| Foz do Minho Beach, Vila do Conde, Caparica Coast, Porto Beach, Mira Beach, Tocha Beach, Sagres and Lisbon | 1 |
The sardines spawning period according to the fishermen interviewed
| Sardines spawning period | Number of times cited by fishermen |
|---|---|
|
| |
| January and February | 20 |
| December | 19 |
| November and March | 15 |
| October | 12 |
| April | 9 |
| May and September | 6 |
| June | 5 |
| July and August | 4 |
|
| |
| Winter | 12 |
| Summer | 8 |
|
| |
| 2 times | 4 |
| 2–3 times | 4 |
| 3 times | 3 |
| 3–4 times | 1 |
The period of fat accumulation of sardines according to the respondents
| Sardines accumulation season | Number of times cited by fishermen |
|---|---|
|
| |
| June | 56 |
| July | 75 |
| August | 68 |
| September | 47 |
| October | 34 |
The correspondence between the Portuguese folk names of the S. pilchardus predators and the scientific classification (Linnaean)
| Folk taxonomy | Scientific names (Linnaean) |
|---|---|
| Atuninha or toninha |
|
| Sharkes | Generally |
| Whales | Generally |
| Safio |
|
| Albacora |
|
| Robalo |
|
| Cherne |
|
| Pargo |
|
| Cavala |
|
| Espada-preto |
|
| Polvo-comum |
|
| Goraz |
|
| Pescada-branca |
|
| Abrótea |
|
| Sarrajão or serrajão |
|
| Raias |
|
| Cantarilho |
|
| Tamboril branco |
|
| Espadarte |
|
| Carapau |
|
| Corvina |
|
| Sargo-legítimo |
|
| Sarda |
|
| Faneca |
|
| Moréia-preta |
|
| Peixe-lua |
|
| Tainhas |
|
| Gaivota |
|
| Albatroz | Generally |
| Birds | Generally |
Fig. 3Number of citations of S. pilchardus food items by fishermen in the fishing community of Peniche, Portugal
Matrix cognition compared between the fishers´ LEK and the scientific literature on the biology and ecology of European pilchard in Peniche, Portugal
| Topics | Fisherman’s citation | Scientific literature |
|---|---|---|
|
| “Coastal species and prefers sites near river mouths in the sea”. | Coastal shelf waters [ |
|
| “Migration carried out in shoals”. | Migratory behaviour, a high dispersal capacity and schooling |
|
| “Mainly Figueira da Foz and Algarve”. | Póvoa de Varzim, Figueira da Foz and Lisbon [ |
|
| “Rapid growth”. | Very fast growth rate [ |
|
| “The main months of spawning are also December, January and February”. | October to April [ |
|
| “June through October”. | Late summer and autumn [ |
|
| “Mainly dolphins (atuninha or toninha), “sharks, whales, conger eel (safio) and yellowfin tuna (albacora)”; “yellow-legged gull (gaivota)”, albatross and other birds”. | Common dolphin ( |
|
| “Plankton, algae called “limo”, small shrimp, krill, the spawn of other fish species and their own spawn”. | Zooplankton as their energy source [ |