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vol.60 suppl.3Elasmobranchs observed in deepwaters (45-330m) at Isla del Coco National Park, Costa Rica (Eastern Tropical Pacific)High genotypic diversity of the reef-building coral Porites lobata (Scleractinia: Poritidae) in Isla del Coco National Park, Costa Rica índice de autoresíndice de materiabúsqueda de artículos
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Revista de Biología Tropical

versión On-line ISSN 0034-7744versión impresa ISSN 0034-7744

Rev. biol. trop vol.60  supl.3 San José nov. 2012

 

First record of the blacktip reef shark Carcharhinus melanopterus (Carcharhiniformes: Carcharhinidae) from the Tropical Eastern Pacific

Andrés López-Garro1*, Ilena Zanella1, Geiner Golfín-Duarte2* & Maikel Pérez-Montero2

*Dirección para correspondencia:

Abstract

The blacktip reef shark Carcharhinus melanopterus, is one of the most common Indo-Pacific reef sharks. On April 29, 2012, a juvenile male blacktip reef shark measuring 89 cm total length (TL), was incidentally caught during a research expedition in Chatham Bay, Isla del Coco National Park, Costa Rica, located in the Tropical Eastern Pacific. This is the first record of the species from Isla del Coco National Park, Costa Rica, and from the Tropical Eastern Pacific.

Key  words: Isla del Coco National Park, Cocos Island, Carcharhinus melanopterus,  blacktip reef shark, Tropical Eastern Pacific.

Resumen

El tiburón punta negra de arrecife,  Carcharhinus melanopterus,  es  uno  de  los  tiburones  de  arrecife  más comunes del Indo-Pacífico. Durante una expedición científica al Parque Nacional Isla del Coco, Costa Rica, Pacífico Tropical Oriental, un tiburón  punta negra de arrecife fue capturado  en  Bahía  Chatham,  Parque  Nacional  Isla  del Coco, el 29 de abril 2012. El espécimen capturado era un macho juvenil de 89 cm. Este es el primer informe de esta especie para el Parque Nacional Isla del Coco, Costa Rica y para el Pacífico Tropical Oriental.

Palabras  claves:  Parque  Nacional  Isla  del  Coco,  Carcharhinus melanopterus, tiburón  punta negra de arrecife, Pacífico Tropical Oriental

The blacktip reef shark, Carcharhinus melanopterus (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824), is one of the most common Indo-Pacific reef sharks. The species is also present in the Red Sea, Western and Central Pacific, and Eastern Mediterranean (through the Suez Canal). The closest records to the Eastern Pacific are from Hawaii, Line Islands, Marquesas Islands and French Polynesia. Blacktip reef sharks inhabit shallow water coral reefs and reef flats on continental and insular shelves. They are commonly found in inshore waters but are also reported from off- shore locations (Compagno 1984, 1988, Bauchot 1987, Bonfil & Abdallah 2004, Compagno et al. 2005). C. melanopterus is viviparous and has a gestation period of 7 to 10 months. Size at birth is estimated at 33 to 50cm (Compagno 1998). Sexual maturity is reached at 95cm TL for males and 97 cm TL for females (Lyle 1987, Porcher 2005).

Blacktip reef sharks show strong site fidelity on coral reef, lagoon and sand flat habitats. Acoustic and conventional tagging data from Palmyra Atoll, in the Western Pacific Ocean, show the species has short movements and small home ranges over a timescale of days to weeks (0.55 ± 0.24km2) (Papastamatiou et al. 2009). Stevens (1984) also reported restricted movements for the species (1-3km2) in the Indian Ocean.

On April 29, 2012 at 20:00 hrs, a blacktip reef shark Carcharhinus melanopterus, was caught  with  hand  line  and  a  modified  size 5  circular  hook.  Sea  surface  temperature  at time  of  capture  was  29.5°C  and  depth  13.4 m. The individual was caught during a tagging expedition studying population dynamics of  the  whitetip  reef  shark  Triaenodon  obesus, in Chatham Bay, Isla del Coco National Park.  Chatham  Bay  is  located  on  the  north side of Isla del Coco (Fig. 1) between coordinates  5º33’25.28”N,  87º02’53.11”W  and 5º33’04.71”N,  87º02’13.76”W.  The  bay  is 1350m  by  610m  and  dominated  by  sandy bottoms with scattered rocks and reefs (Sibaja- Cordero et al. 2012), specimen was photographed, and released alive after hook removal.

Positive identification of the species was attained by analysis of the following distinctive characters (Compagno 1984, 1998, Compagno et al. 1995, 2005): (i) short rounded snout with large anterior nasal flaps (Fig. 2A), (ii) black tips on all fins, including the edge of the caudal fin’s upper lobe (Figs. 2 B, C), (iii) light band that borders the black mark on the first dorsal fin (Fig. 2D), and (iv) distinctive body color: yellow-brown dorsal surface and white under- side, with conspicuous dark bands on the flanks that extend back towards the pelvic fins (Fig. 2D). The shark’s size (89cm TL) together with the low calcification of its claspers, suggests the individual was a juvenile. This is the first record of a blacktip reef shark from from Isla del Coco National Park and from the Tropical Eastern Pacific (Allen & Robertson 1998, Bus- sing & López 2005, Garrison 2005, Robertson et al. 2004, Robertson & Allen 2008).

Garrison (2005) identified over 270 fish species (including 7 sharks and 4 rays) at Isla del Coco: 30 species have a circumtropical or circumglobal distribution and over 40 species are reported from scattered Indo-Pacific locations or throughout the Indo-Pacific Ocean (most of these are bony fish, e.g. the genus Thalassoma, that probably traveled 5000km with floating debris to arrive in the Eastern Pacific Ocean). Several Indo-Pacific elasmobranchs are present at Isla del Coco, including the silvertip (Carcharhinus albimarginatus) and the white-tip shark (Triaenodon obesus). Their distribution extends into the continental waters  of  Central  America.  Other  example is the marble ray (Taeniura meyeni); is only present at Isla del Coco and Galapagos Islands in  the  Tropical  Eastern  Pacific,  and  absent from the central american mainland (Grove & Lavenberg 1997, Garrison 2005).

The presence of a juvenile blacktip reef shark at Isla del Coco suggests that a pregnant female traveled at least 5000km and arrived at Isla del Coco to give birth at Chatham Bay. C. melanopterus possibly represents a new arrival for Isla del Coco National Park.

Acknowledgments

We thank the personnel of Isla del Coco National Park and Isla del Coco Marine Conservation Area for their support during the research  expeditions  of  Misión  Tiburón.  We are grateful to Lucy Harrison, Program Officer of IUCN Shark Specialist Group, and to the  experts  Dave  Ebert  and  Gavin  Naylor for confirming the identification of the species. Finally, we thank Jorge Cortés from the University of Costa Rica and Katherine Cure from the University of Western Australia for the revision of this note.

References

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*Correspondencia a:
Andrés López-Garro. Asociación Conservacionista Misión Tiburón, Playas del Coco, Guanacaste, Costa Rica; Telefax: (506) 2697-1847; alopez@misiontiburon.org
Ilena Zanella. Asociación Conservacionista Misión Tiburón, Playas del Coco, Guanacaste, Costa Rica; Telefax: (506) 2697-1847; izanella@misiontiburon.org
Geiner Golfín-Duarte. Parque Nacional Isla del Coco. Área Conservación Marina Isla del Coco. Sistema Nacional de Áreas de Conservación, Costa Rica; geiner.golfin@sinac.go.cr
Maikel Pérez-Montero. Parque Nacional Isla del Coco. Área Conservación Marina Isla del Coco. Sistema Nacional de Áreas de Conservación, Costa Rica; elcocolaisla@hotmail.com
1.  Asociación Conservacionista Misión Tiburón, Playas del Coco, Guanacaste, Costa Rica; Telefax: (506) 2697-1847; alopez@misiontiburon.org; izanella@misiontiburon.org
2.  Parque Nacional Isla del Coco. Área Conservación Marina Isla del Coco. Sistema Nacional de Áreas de Conservación, Costa Rica; geiner.golfin@sinac.go.cr; elcocolaisla@hotmail.com

Received 19-V-2012. Corrected 26-VI-2012. Accepted 24-IX-2012

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