Animals (Jun 2023)

Adaptive Response to Gillnets Bycatch in a North Sardinia Mediterranean Shag (<i>Gulosus aristotelis desmarestii</i>) Population

  • Valentina Satta,
  • Angela Pira,
  • Santino Cherchi,
  • Sergio Nissardi,
  • Andrea Rotta,
  • Monica Pirastru,
  • Paolo Mereu,
  • Marco Zedda,
  • Luisa Bogliolo,
  • Salvatore Naitana,
  • Giovanni Giuseppe Leoni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13132142
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 13
p. 2142

Abstract

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Mediterranean Shag (Gulosus aristotelis desmarestii) is a seabird endemic to the Mediterranean and Black Seas, recently included in the IUCN list of threatened Species. Most of the reproductive colonies are hosted in Sardinia and surrounding islets. Bycatch in fishing nets is one of the most significant threats for this population. Our work aimed to assess alterations in the sex ratio caused by bycatch and to study the adaptive response of the population to a skewed adult sex ratio. The sex ratio of Mediterranean Shags found drowned in the gillnets near the colonies and that of the nestlings of the Corcelli (northeast Sardinia) colony was determined using the sex-linked polymorphism of the gene Chromobox-Helicase-DNA-binding 1. The data of the shags found drowned in gillnets evidenced a high mortality rate (83.3%; p p p < 0.05). Furthermore, it was related to the brood size. In one- and two-chick broods, 73% and 70% of nestlings, respectively, were males, while in three-chick broods, only 33% were males. Our data identify the higher rate of male shags drowned in gillnets as a factor causing an alteration of the sex ratio in the Mediterranean Shag population. According to the Sex Allocation Theory, an adaptive adjustment of sex made by adult females restores the Mendelian sex ratio in the population.

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