Rosângela Lessa
Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco
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Featured researches published by Rosângela Lessa.
Fisheries Research | 2004
Rosângela Lessa; Francisco M. Santana; Fábio H. V. Hazin
Between 1992 and 2000, 681 blue sharks, Prionace glauca(173.8–310 cm total length, TL) were collected off northeastern Brazil (Brazilian EEZ). Vertebral sections of 156 males (173.8–310 cm TL) and 80 females (185.5–283 cm TL) were analysed. The index of average percentage error (IAPE) ranged from 0 to 3.1% for 3–12 growth rings (GRs). Mean marginal increment (MI) decreased from November to January without, however, conclusively confirm the annual pattern of deposition. Growth parameters were derived using the von Bertalanffy growth function (VBGF), the Richards function and the Schnute function. VBGF was that which best fit the data. Parameters derived from back-calculated lengths, K = 0.157, L∞ = 352.1 cm and t0 =− 1.01 year, were considered to best describe growth. First maturity sizes of 225 cm for males and 228 cm for females corresponded to 5-GRs individuals. A 310-cm male had 12 GRs which was the highest number in the entire sample. Growth rates of 33.9 cm per GR were estimated from birth to the first band corresponding to 60.2% of size at birth, which is 56.4 cm. Adult males were 90.5% of the entire male sample and, adult females corresponded to 79.6% of the sample of females. The male sample was composed of individuals from 3 to >11 GRs and females were 3 to 10 GRs. Males were larger (with higher number of GRs) and outnumbered females in the overall sample, as commonly occurs in catches worldwide. Despite the hypothesis of differential growth by sex, postulated by several authors, the present study demonstrated that growth curves did not differ significantly, even considering significant vertebral radius (VR)–TL regressions for males and females. Higher growth rates were found in the southern Hemisphere, leading to significant differences in VBGF when compared to other areas. Discards and unreported catches are of great concern for conservation of this important apex predator.
Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2004
Teodoro Vaske Júnior; Carolus Maria Vooren; Rosângela Lessa
Billfishes from the Brazilian oceanic northeastern region feed on a large food spectrum composed mainly of epipelagic species of fish and cephalopods, with occasional occurrences of mesopelagic organisms and crustaceans. The oceanic pomfret, Brama brama, and the squid, Ornithoteuthis antillarum, were the main prey items in the diet of the four species, occurring in at least 50% of the stomachs containing food. There was no correlation between body length of prey and predator, or between mass of stomach content and body mass in the individuals from 100 to 330 cm fork length. The feeding of the four species was characterized by constant ingestion of small quantities of food, and constant presence of food in the stomachs, with a predominance of epipelagic organisms of small sizes with an average of 8.0 cm. The reduced stomach size forces the predators to feed constantly on several meals during the day, and consequently provide constant energy for migration.
Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2006
Rosângela Lessa; Francisco M. Santana; Paulo José Duarte-Neto
Marginal increment ratio (MIR) analyses were conducted as part of age and growth studies on three coastal/semi-oceanic species, the smalltail shark, Carcharhinus porosus, daggernose shark, Isogomphodon oxyrhynchus and the night shark C. signatus, and two ubiquitous oceanic species, blue shark, Prionace glauca, and whitetip shark, C. longimanus, collected in equatorial areas off Brazil with the aim of establishing the interspecific temporal nature of vertebral band formation. Monthly variations in marginal bands were analyzed using mean MIR on the entire sample as the standard method for all species. Reasons for the inconclusive results regarding these species are critically appraised with respect to three main sources of bias that are associated with marginal increment analysis (MIA). Bias due to insufficient sample sizes may have hampered the analysis for I. oxyrhynchus and C. longimanus due to movements from shallow waters to seamounts for the former species and to extensive migrations for the latter. Bias due to data collection over too long a period is thought to have influenced monthly mean MIR for C. porosus and P. glauca. For the latter, individuals from different age groups lay down rings at different times, making band deposition inconsistent between individuals. Finally, bias due to births occurring over too long a period was the prevalent cause for confounding MIR values among I. oxyrhynchus and C. signatus species, whose birth period lasts several months and leads to different ages within the same cohort. Other approaches used for MIA in C. signatus and P.␣glauca led to distinct times of band formation by age-groups when compared to MIR applied on the entire sample. For the daggernose shark, delays in events related to the reproductive cycle from one year to the next were also found to confound MIR. Requirements for the use of MIR implying a band width that displays a sinusoidal cycle when temporally plotted (month or season) were not fulfilled for any of these species. The method has been of little utility for detecting the periodicity of band deposition among sharks from the tropics. This emphasizes the need for supplying information on the temporal periodicity of pair deposition based on other methods.
Journal of Fish Biology | 2012
A. S. Afonso; F. H. V. Hazin; Rodrigo R. Barreto; Francisco M. Santana; Rosângela Lessa
Two tagged-and-recaptured tiger sharks Galeocerdo cuvier, measuring 172 and 304 cm total length (L(T) ) and at age 0.75 and 3.50 years, exhibited unmatched growth rates of 118.4 and 55.5 cm year(-1), respectively. The larger fish was nearly mature, indicating that G. cuvier off Brazil could mature considerably earlier than conspecifics from other regions.
Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology | 2006
José de Melo Lima Filho; Rosângela Lessa; Borko Stosic; Paulo José Duarte Neto; José Wilson Vieira
External morphological distinction between young Selene vomer and S. brownii (Carangidae) was studied using multivariate analysis with the purpose to evaluate if other characters than the second dorsal and pelvic fin spines could be used as distinguishing attributes for juveniles fishes. These spines are important distinctive morphological characters, but they can be absent in juvenile fishes or be broken during manipulation. A sample of 389 specimens was collected from beach netting at Caicara do Norte (RN), northeastern Brazil, in 2001. Each specimen was digitalized and their images provided numerical matrices using Scion Image and FANTOMAS software. A C-language program was developed and used to calculate 16 Euclidean distances and nine homologous landmarks plotted on images. Discriminant analysis results revealed that the two Selene species was clearly distinguished employing morphometric procedures of diagonally oriented measurements of the antero-posterior body axis.
Crustaceana | 2012
Renata A. Shinozaki-Mendes; Roberto Ferreira Manghi; Rosângela Lessa
Swimming crabs (family Portunidae) were collected in Santa Cruz Canal, Brazil from March 2009 through February 2010 using a beach seine and fishing line. The purpose of this study was to characterize the abundance of portunid crab species and to analyse the influence of environmental factors on the catches per unit effort (CPUE) values of Callinectes danae Smith, 1869 in the canal. The catches included five species: C. danae (the most abundant species), Callinectes marginatus (A. Milne-Edwards, 1861), Callinectes exasperatus (Gerstaecker, 1856), Charybdis hellerii (A. Milne-Edwards, 1867) and Callinectes bocourti A. Milne-Edwards, 1879. The species could be assigned to groups according to their abundance and the values of catches were higher during the dry period. The influences of water temperature, tide height, lunar illumination, salinity, precipitation and season were tested, although the average CPUE (μ) of C. danae for the beach seine and line methods was influenced only by tide height (T) and by salinity (S), according to the model: μ seine = exp ( 3 . 4921 − 1 . 3584 T ) and μ line = exp ( 0 . 055589 S ) . Within the ranges of the environmental variables included in the study, a tide height of 0.1 m was found to optimize the CPUE of the beach seine (28.68 Ind/h per m2). Furthermore, the CPUE using the line was optimized as the salinity level increased, with a capture rate of 05.92 Ind/h.
Journal of Fish Biology | 2015
M. F. Nóbrega; P. G. Kinas; Rosângela Lessa; E. Ferrandis
The sampling of fish from the artisanal fleet operating with surface lines off north-eastern Brazil was carried out between 1998 and 2000. Generalized linear models (GLMs) were used to standardize mean abundance indices using catch and fishing effort data on dolphinfish Coryphaena hippurus and to identify abundance trends in time and space, using 1215 surface line deployments. A standard relative abundance index (catch per unit effort, CPUE) was estimated for the most frequent vessels used in the sets, employing factors and coefficients generated in the GLMs. According to the models, C. hippurus catches are affected by the operating characteristics and power of different fishing vessels. These differences highlight the need for standardization of catch and effort data for artisanal fisheries. The highest mean abundance values for C. hippurus were off the state of Rio Grande do Norte, with an increasing tendency in areas with greater depths and more distant from the coast, reaching maximal values in areas whose depths range from 200 to 500 m. The highest mean abundance values occurred between April and June. The higher estimated abundance of C. hippurus in this period off the state of Rio Grande do Norte and within the 200-500 m depth range may be related to a migration pattern of food sources, as its main prey, the flying fish Hirundichthys affinis, uses floating algae as refuge and to deposit its pelagic eggs.
Journal of Fish Biology | 2018
P. Charvet; Francisco M. Santana; K. L. De Lima; Rosângela Lessa
Between 2003 and 2005, vertebrae of 151 Xingu River Potamotrygon leopoldi (Potamotrygonidae) (75 males and 76 females) were analysed to derive a growth curve for this species. The disc width (WD ) was significantly different between sexes, with females measuring 149-700 mm WD and males 109-500 mm WD . The average percentage error for vertebrae readings of the whole sample was 2·7%. The marginal increment ratio (RMI ) showed an increasing trend with the highest value in November, decreasing from December on. The majority of vertebrae displaying RMI zero, occurred in September, but the annual periodicity of ring deposition throughout the year was not conclusive. Tetracycline (TCN) injected specimens were held in captivity for 13 months and displayed a fluorescent mark in vertebrae confirming a yearly periodicity of band pair formation with the translucent ring deposited in September-October. The Akaike information criterion (AIC) showed that, among the seven models considered, the best fit was obtained for the von Bertalanffy modified with W0 (where W0 = WD at birth) for both sexes. Growth parameters for females were: W0 = 149 mm; W∞ = 763·06 mm; k = 0·12 year- 1 , whereas for males: W0 = 109 mm; W∞ = 536·4 and k = 0·22 year-1 . Maximal ages were 7·2 years in males and 14·3 years in females. The species shows sexual dimorphism expressed in the growth pattern, size at maturity, longevity and asymptotic sizes. Concern for sustainability is raised due to the construction of the Belo Monte Hydroelectric Power Plant (2015 and 2016) in the State of Pará causing changes to the habitat of this species, which is endemic to the Xingu River and two of its tributaries.
Journal of Fish Biology | 2016
Rosângela Lessa; H. A. Andrade; K. L. De Lima; Francisco M. Santana
Age and growth were analysed on the basis of 372 vertebrae from specimens of the crocodile shark Pseudocarcharias kamoharai (66·0-122·0 cm, total length, LT ) collected in the south-western Atlantic Ocean. Centrum edge analysis suggested the first four months of the year as the period of band completion, leading to acceptance of free-living bands as annual. A pre-birth ring is formed in embryos >31·0 cm LT , whereas the birthmark is deposited in newborns of 46·1 ± 1·1 cm LT (mean ± s.d.). Growth was parameterized using seven models and the AIC was used for selection of the most plausible model. The von Bertalanffy growth model received the greatest support from the data, providing the following growth parameters for combined sexes: L∞ = 129·2 cm, k = 0·137 year(-1) and t0 = -3·9 years. No significant differences were detected in growth by sex, but significant differences in age composition by sex were found in the sample. Overall age ranged from 2 to >13 years in females and from 1 to 8 years in males. Males achieved first maturity at 3·1 years and females at 5·1 years, with pregnancy appearing at 4·8 years. Similar to other lamnoid species, P. kamoharai is relatively fast growing.
Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2006
Leandro Yokota; Rosângela Lessa