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Dive into the research topics where Rui Coelho is active.

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Featured researches published by Rui Coelho.


Fisheries Research | 2003

Age and growth, maturity, mortality and yield-per-recruit for two banded bream (Diplodus vulgaris Geoffr.) from the south coast of Portugal

Jorge M.S. Gonçalves; L. Bentes; Rui Coelho; C. Correia; Pedro G. Lino; C.C. Monteiro; Joaquim Ribeiro; Karim Erzini

The population dynamics parameters of Diplodus vulgaris(Sparidae) from the south and south-west coast of Portugal were studied. 1086 fishes with total lengths ranging from 3.3 to 37.9 cm were obtained from previous gear selectivity studies supplemented by market sampling and beach seining for juveniles (1992–2000). The spawning season extended from September to April and total lengths at 50% maturity were 17.27 cm for males and 17.65 cm for females. These estimated sizes were greater than the minimum legal landing size (MLS = 15 cm) and smaller than length at first capture (Lc 50 = 21.68 cm) for the longline fishery. The parameters of the von Bertalanffy growth equation were: L∞ = 27.73 cm, K = 0.40 per year, t0 =− 0.34 year. The instantaneous rates of total mortality ( Z) and natural mortality (M) were 0.63 and 0.45 per year, respectively. Rates of fishing mortality F and exploitation E were 0.18 and 0.28 per year, respectively. Estimated parameters and the relative yield-per-recruit analysis showed that this species is not over exploited by longlines.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2006

Feeding habits of the velvet belly lanternshark Etmopterus spinax (Chondrichthyes: Etmopteridae) off the Algarve, southern Portugal

João Neiva; Rui Coelho; Karim Erzini

Etmopterus spinax is one of the most abundant predators of the upper continental slope off the Algarve (southern Portugal), where it is captured in large quantities in deep-water fisheries. The feeding habits of E. spinax off the Algarve were investigated through the analysis of stomach contents of 376 individuals. Prey composition was described and maturity, sex and size related variations in the diet analysed. The overall diet of E. spinax suggested a fairly generalized benthopelagic foraging behaviour primarily tuned to pelagic macroplankton/microneckton, teleost fish and cephalopods. Sex and maturity related differences in the diet were not significant. Two main ontogenic diet shifts were observed at about 17 and 28 cm total length. Small and medium sized immature sharks had a diet dominated by eurybathic crustaceans, chiefly Meganyctiphanes norvegica and Pasiphaea sivado . Larger individuals consumed more teleosts and cephalopods, in part associated with scavenging as a new feeding strategy. With increasing shark size the diet diversified both in terms of resources exploited and prey size.


Marine and Freshwater Research | 2007

The use of caudal thorns for ageing Raja undulata from the Portuguese continental shelf, with comments on its reproductive cycle

Teresa F. Moura; Ivone Figueiredo; Inês Farias; Bárbara Serra-Pereira; Rui Coelho; Karim Erzini; Ana Neves; Leonel Serrano Gordo

The present study focuses on age estimation, with reproductive information contributing to the better understanding of the growth and the biology of Raja undulata. In the age and growth study, two calcified structures were used: caudal thorns and central vertebra. Results of readings showed that there were no significant differences in age estimates between the two structures. Both von Bertalanffy and Gompertz growth models were fitted to size-at-age data by sex and geographical area. No significant differences were found between sexes for the two models but significant differences were found between geographical areas (P = 0.05). The Gompertz growth function was selected as the best model to describe R. undulata growth because it presented the best fit and the most reasonable biological estimates. Reproductive analysis indicates one annual breeding season for R. undulata. The differences found in the estimates of length at first maturity between geographical areas (TL50% = 838 mm in Peniche and 762 mm in Algarve for females and TL50% = 781 mm in Peniche and 736 mm in Algarve for males), together with the regional differences found between growth parameters estimates (P = 0.05), may reflect the existence of different local populations of R. undulata on the Portuguese continental shelf.


Marine Biodiversity Records | 2013

The deep-sea fish Kali macrodon : a new record for the tropical eastern Atlantic off Cape Verde

Rui P. Vieira; Ralf Thiel; Bernd Christiansen; Rui Coelho; Anneke Denda; Jorge M.S. Gonçalves

rui pedro vieira, ralf thiel, bernd christiansen, rui coelho, anneke denda and jorge manuel dos santos gonc‚alves CCMAR—Centre of Marine Sciences, University of Algarve, Campus de Gambelas, 8005-139 Faro, Portugal, Present address: CESAM & Department of Biology, University of Aveiro, Campus Universitario de Santiago, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal, University of Hamburg, Biocenter Grindel and Zoological Museum, Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3, 20146 Hamburg, Germany, University of Hamburg, Institut fur Hydrobiologie und Fischereiwissenschaft, Grose Elbstrase 133, 22767 Hamburg, Germany, CCMAR— Centre of Marine Sciences, University of Algarve, Campus de Gambelas, 8005-139 Faro, Portugal


Hydrobiologia | 2008

Effects of fishing methods on deep water shark species caught as by-catch off southern Portugal

Rui Coelho; Karim Erzini

Deep water sharks are commonly caught as by-catch of longlines targeting bony fishes and trawlers targeting crustaceans in deep water off the southern Portuguese coast. Due to low or no commercial value, these species are most of the times discarded at sea, with only the larger specimens of some species commercialized at very low prices. In this study we present size distributions, maturity distributions, and sex ratios of 2,138 specimens belonging to four different species, namely the lantern sharks Etmopterus pusillus and Etmopterus spinax and the catsharks Galeus melastomus and Galeus atlanticus, caught with these two gears. Trawls generally caught smaller-sized specimens, in a wider length range than longlines. Trawls caught mostly immature specimens of all species, namely 83.7% immature of E. pusillus, 84.3% of E. spinax, 89.5% of G. melastomus, and 95.5% of G. atlanticus, while longlines caught mostly immature E. pusillus (69.2%) and G. melastomus (78.6%) and mostly mature E. spinax (88.2%) and G. atlanticus (87.2%). Trawls tended to catch more males than females of all species except E. spinax, while longlines caught more females than males of E. spinax and G. melastomus and more males than females of the other two species. The main conclusion of this work is that trawls are catching smaller-sized and mostly immature specimens when compared to longlines, meaning that they are probably having a more detrimental effect on these shark populations. The data presented here have significant implications for the conservation of these shark populations since sizes, sexes, and the immature and mature components of the populations are being affected differently by these two fishing gears.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2005

Length at first maturity of two species of lantern sharks ( Etmopterus spinax and Etmopterus pusillus ) off southern Portugal

Rui Coelho; Karim Erzini

Etmopterus spinax and Etmopterus pusillus are captured in large quantities in some deep-water fisheries along the Portuguese coast and are always discarded. Specimens were collected from February 2003 to May 2004 from deep-water fisheries and classified as mature or immature. Maturity ogives were fitted and size at first maturity estimated for each sex of each species. Both species are late maturing, with the maturity sizes varying between 75% and 87% of the maximum observed sizes, depending on species and sex. For both species, females tended to mature at and grow to larger sizes than males. The late maturation of these deep-water shark species makes these populations extremely vulnerable to increasing fishing mortality.


Conservation Genetics | 2011

Species delimitation in sharpnose sharks (genus Rhizoprionodon) in the western Atlantic Ocean using mitochondrial DNA

Fernando Fernandes Mendonça; Claudio Oliveira; George H. Burgess; Rui Coelho; Andrew N. Piercy; Otto Bismarck Fazzano Gadig; Fausto Foresti

Despite Springer’s (1964) revision of the sharpnose sharks (genus Rhizoprionodon), the taxonomic definition and ranges of Rhizoprionodon in the western Atlantic Ocean remains problematic. In particular, the distinction between Rhizoprionodon terraenovae and R. porosus, and the occurrence of R. terraenovae in South American waters are unresolved issues involving common and ecologically important species in need of fishery management in Caribbean and southwest Atlantic waters. In recent years, molecular markers have been used as efficient tools for the detection of cryptic species and to address controversial taxonomic issues. In this study 415 samples of the genus Rhizoprionodon captured in the western Atlantic Ocean from Florida to southern Brazil were examined for sequences of the COI gene and the D-loop and evaluated for nucleotide differences. The results on nucleotide composition, AMOVA tests, and relationship distances using Bayesian-likelihood method and haplotypes network, corroborates Springer’s (1964) morphometric and meristic finding and provide strong evidence that supports consideration of R. terraenovae and R. porosus as distinct species.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2002

Age and growth of the undulate ray, Raja undulata, in the Algarve (southern Portugal)

Rui Coelho; Karim Erzini

Aspects of the population dynamics of the undulate ray, Raja undulata (Chondrichthyes: Rajidae), one of the more abundant elasmobranch fish captured along the Portuguese south coast (Algarve), were studied for the first time. Some traditional elasmobranch vertebral enhancing techniques were compared and the most precise for this species determined to be the cedar wood oil immersion and the alizarin red S stain. The sample consisted of 14 age-classes, with age-classes 3 to 8 being the most represented. Evidence of an annual deposition pattern of a pair of bands (one opaque and one translucent) was found by marginal increment analyses. Von Bertalanffy growth parameters were estimated and no differences found between males and females (all data: L inf =110·22 cm, K=0·11 y −1 and t 0 =−1·58 y).


PLOS ONE | 2015

High connectivity of the crocodile shark between the Atlantic and Southwest Indian Oceans: highlights for conservation.

Bruno Lopes da Silva Ferrette; Fernando Fernandes Mendonça; Rui Coelho; Paulo G. V. Oliveira; Fábio H. V. Hazin; Evgeny V. Romanov; Claudio Oliveira; Miguel N. Santos; Fausto Foresti

Among the various shark species that are captured as bycatch in commercial fishing operations, the group of pelagic sharks is still one of the least studied and known. Within those, the crocodile shark, Pseudocarcharias kamoharai, a small-sized lamnid shark, is occasionally caught by longline vessels in certain regions of the tropical oceans worldwide. However, the population dynamics of this species, as well as the impact of fishing mortality on its stocks, are still unknown, with the crocodile shark currently one of the least studied of all pelagic sharks. Given this, the present study aimed to assess the population structure of P. kamoharai in several regions of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans using genetic molecular markers. The nucleotide composition of the mitochondrial DNA control region of 255 individuals was analyzed, and 31 haplotypes were found, with an estimated diversity Hd = 0.627, and a nucleotide diversity π = 0.00167. An analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) revealed a fixation index Φ ST = -0.01118, representing an absence of population structure among the sampled regions of the Atlantic Ocean, and between the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. These results show a high degree of gene flow between the studied areas, with a single genetic stock and reduced population variability. In panmictic populations, conservation efforts can be concentrated in more restricted areas, being these representative of the total biodiversity of the species. When necessary, this strategy could be applied to the genetic maintenance of P. kamoharai.


Brazilian Journal of Oceanography | 2010

Life history of the common pandora, Pagellus erythrinus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Actinopterygii: Sparidae) from southern Portugal

Rui Coelho; L. Bentes; C. Correia; Jorge M.S. Gonçalves; Pedro G. Lino; Pedro Monteiro; Joaquim Ribeiro; Karim Erzini

A bica, Pagellus erythrinus, e uma especie comercialmente importante para as pescarias costeiras do norte e centro este Atlântico. A idade, crescimento e aspectos reprodutivos da populacao que ocorre no sul de Portugal foram estudados atraves da analise de 386 exemplares com comprimentos totais (TL) entre 12.0 e 44.8 cm. A idade foi estimada pela contagem de bandas de crescimento nos otolitos e verificada pela analise do incremento marginal, tendo-se observado exemplares entre os 1 e 21 anos. A curva de crescimento de von Bertalanffy foi o modelo mais adequado para explicar o crescimento desta especie, tendo estimado Linf = 47.14 cm TL, k = 0.084 ano-1 e t0 = - 4.42 ano. As gonadas foram analisadas macroscopicamente ao longo do periodo de um ano e determinou-se que a desova ocorre entre Marco e Julho. A primeira maturacao dos machos ocorre aos 17.58 cm TL e 1.15 anos enquanto as femeas maturam com tamanhos (17.29 cm TL) e idades (1.04 anos) ligeiramente menores. Os resultados apresentados sao importantes para a comparacao desta populacao com populacoes de outras regioes, assim como para a comparacao com estudos futuros, para a determinacao de eventuais alteracoes nos parâmetros populacionais ao longo do tempo.

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Miguel N. Santos

Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera

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Karim Erzini

University of the Algarve

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Pedro G. Lino

University of the Algarve

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L. Bentes

University of the Algarve

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Pedro Monteiro

University of the Algarve

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Joaquim Ribeiro

University of the Algarve

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C. Correia

University of the Algarve

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Sérgio Amorim

Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera

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