On The Prawn Fisheries in the Gulf of Suez, Egypt
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Date
1993Author
Yassin, Mohamed H. [محمد ياسين]Bebars, Mohamed I.
Abdel Razek, Fatma A.
Ghobashy, Abdel Fattah A.
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Prawn fisheries in the Gulf of Suez constitute about 13.7% of the total fish and shrimp landings. About 11% are made up by three penaeid species namely: Penaeus japonicus Bate, Penaeus semisulcatus De Han and Penaeus latisulcatus Kishinouy. Metapenaeopsis stridulants Alcock and Trachypenaeus curvirostris Stimpson are two further small species which form only 2.7% of the-total landing of the trawlers in the Gulf.
Percentages of the three large species are 47% for P. japonicus, 30% for P. latisulcatus and 23% for P. semisulcatus. The intensive fishing period takes place from October to May, coinciding with the spawning period of P. semisulcatus (October-March).
The middle of the Northern half of the Gulf is the richest area for the three forms. The monthly catch weight per unit effort showed a general decline from the beginning of each fishing season to January-February. A slight increase occurred afterwards. This may be due to the new arrivals of P. latisulcatus to the fishery ground.
The fishing season 1983-1984 gave a high yield of the large prawns (749 tons) with a fishing effort of 13690 fishing days.
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/10043Collections
- Qatar University Science Journal - [From 1981 TO 2007] [770 items ]