ISRA FACTSHEETS
ISRA FACTSHEETS
WESTERN INDIAN OCEAN REGION
Wadge Bank
Summary
Wadge Bank is a large area of the continental shelf at the southern tip of India off the coast of Kerala and Tamil Nadu. It is generally flat with a variable benthos of sand, mud, and rock. Currents and eddies support vertical mixing and upwelling resulting in high biological productivity during the boreal summer monsoon. The area overlaps with Suchindram Therur, Vembanoor Key Biodiversity Area. Within this area there are: threatened species (e.g., Grey Bambooshark Chiloscyllium griseum); range-restricted species (e.g., Indian Swellshark Cephaloscyllium silasi); reproductive areas (e.g., Indian Ring Skate Orbiraja powelli); and the area sustains a high diversity of sharks (23 species).
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Wadge Bank
DESCRIPTION OF HABITAT
Wadge Bank is situated at the southern tip of India off the coast of Kerala and Tamil Nadu. The bank is a prominent seafloor feature representing a wide area of the continental shelf. The eastern part of the area is generally flatter and shallower than the western part (Sivalingam & Medcof 1957).
The benthos of the area is variable between sandy, muddy, and rocky substrates, although mud patches are more limited (Sivalingam & Medcof 1957; Mitra 1987). Rocky areas include patches of pinnacle rocks in both shallow and deeper water (Sivalingam & Medcof 1957; Mitra 1987). Sponge and sea fan beds were prominent in some parts of the bank but have been heavily impacted by repeated trawling (Mitra 1987).
The area falls well within southern part of the coastal upwelling system of the Southeastern Arabian Sea and is a physically active area with strong southeast currents (40–60 cm/s) and offshore Ekman mass transport (maximum of 8,000 kg/m/s in August) (Smitha et al. 2008; Sree Renjima et al. 2017). Cold core eddies present during the summer monsoon (Shafeeque et al. 2021) supports vertical mixing along with upwelling, resulting in high biological productivity.
The area overlaps with Suchindram Therur, Vembanoor Key Biodiversity Area (KBA) (KBA 2023).
This Important Shark and Ray Area is benthopelagic and is delineated from inshore and surface waters (0 m) to 150 m based on the bathymetry of the area.
CRITERION A
VULNERABILITY
Twenty-two Qualifying Species considered threatened with extinction according to the IUCN Red List of Threatened SpeciesTM regularly occur in the area. Threatened sharks comprise three Critically Endangered species, one Endangered species, and five Vulnerable species; threatened rays comprise four Critically Endangered species, five Endangered species, and four Vulnerable species (IUCN 2023).
CRITERION B
RANGE RESTRICTED
Wadge Bank holds the regular presence of Indian Swellshark, Stripenose Guitarfish, and Indian Ring Skate as resident range-restricted species. These species occur year-round in the area and are commonly caught as bycatch in benthic trawls and gillnets of local fisheries which operate on Wadge Bank (e.g., Akhilesh et al. 2014; Karuppasamy et al. 2020; Wilson et al. 2020; Bhagyalekshmi & Kumar 2021; Bineesh et al. 2023).
Wadge Bank along with Kollam Slope are the primary areas where Indian Swellshark are regularly encountered in India (Akhilesh et al. 2014; Bineesh KK unpubl. data 2023). Stripenose Guitarfish and Indian Ring Skate are only encountered with any regularity in western India at Wadge Bank despite extensive fisheries along the whole west coast of India (Chembian 2010; Bhagyalekshmi & Kumar 2021).
These species are restricted to the Arabian Sea Large Marine Ecosystem (LME) and the Bay of Bengal LME.
CRITERION C
SUB-CRITERION C1 – REPRODUCTIVE AREAS
Wadge Bank is an important reproductive area for one shark and three ray species. The primary data comes from the monitoring of the major catch landing sites where fisheries operating in Wadge Bank land their catch with dissections providing information on reproductive biology (e.g., Bhagyalekshmi & Kumar 2021; Bineesh KK unpubl. data 2019–2022).
Grey Bambooshark are a regular bycatch of benthic trawls, beach seines, and hook-and-line operating in the area. During monitoring of landing sites across 2017–2019, a total of 896 individuals of both sexes were recorded with 3.5% of individuals classified as neonates (<12 cm total length [TL]) which is the size-at-birth as reported by Ebert et al. (2021) and 6.9% were pregnant females with egg cases containing fully formed embryos (Bineesh KK unpubl. data 2019). Wadge Bank is the area off southwestern India where larger numbers of neonates and pregnant females have been observed suggesting that the area serves as a pupping ground. Stripenose Guitarfish are regularly caught as bycatch in the area (Bineesh et al. 2023). During monitoring of landing sites across 2021–2022, a total of 367 individuals of both sexes were recorded with 22.2% being pregnant females mostly at late pregnancy stages (size range: 58–75 cm TL) suggesting this area serves as a pupping ground (Bineesh KK unpubl. data 2022). The species has been recorded year-round but peak numbers are observed from September to January. An additional single pregnant female was reported from longline bycatch in the area in November 2019 at a depth of 110–130 m (Wilson et al. 2020). Wadge Bank is the area off southern India where larger numbers of pregnant females have been observed. Indian Ring Skate are a regular bycatch of benthic trawls for shrimps and bony fishes in the area. An exploratory survey documented an egg-laying area in Wadge Bank (species misidentified as Raja miraletus at the time; Chembian 2010). Egg cases (n = 119) were recorded on three of 15 survey stations, clustered in the southwest of the area and egg cases were not recorded in other sites, for example, deeper surveys sites off the edge of the area (Chembian 2010). During monitoring of landing sites across 2017–2019, a total of 562 individuals of both sexes were recorded including 12 females containing egg cases with fully developed embryos (Bineesh KK unpubl. data 2019). Sampled skates ranged in size 7–52 cm TL and smaller individuals represented neonates and young-of-the-year (Bineesh KK unpubl. data 2019).
Bengal Guitarfish is one of the most common rays on the bank (e.g., the most common landed batoid observed at Colachel and the second most common batoid at Muttom; Bhagyalekshmi & Kumar 2021). This species is a regular bycatch of benthic trawls for shrimps and bony fishes in the area. During monitoring of landing sites across 2017–2019, a total of 1,482 individuals of both sexes (size range: 58–96 cm TL) were recorded (Bineesh KK unpubl. data 2019). Given a size-at-maturity of 61 and 63 cm TL for females and males, respectively (Purushottama et al. 2020), most sampled animals were adult with 11.2% (n = 166) being pregnant females (Bineesh KK unpubl. data 2019).
CRITERION D
SUB-CRITERION D2 – DIVERSITY
Wadge Bank sustains a high diversity of Qualifying species (23 species). This exceeds the regional diversity threshold (22 species) for the Western Indian Ocean Region.
Wadge Bank area is one of the most important fishing grounds of southern India with a long history of various fisheries operating in the area (Mendis 1965; Mitra 1987; Karuppasamy et al. 2020; Bhagyalekshmi & Kumar 2021). Monitoring of landing sites and exploratory surveys by Fishery Survey of India and CIFNET (Central institute for fisheries Nautical and Engineering Training) provide information on the regular occurrence of the Qualifying Species in the area. The major landing sites are Chinnamuttom (Tamil Nadu), Muttom (Tamil Nadu), Colachel (Tamil Nadu), Thengapattanam (Tamil Nadu), and Vizhinjam (Kerala). Sharks and rays are a regular bycatch of trawl, gillnet, line, and seine fisheries operating on Wadge Bank and landed in these centres and the Qualifying Species represent the most regularly encountered species (Karuppasamy et al. 2020; Bhagyalekshmi & Kumar 2021; Bineesh KK unpubl. data 2023). Whale Shark bycatch has occurred historically on Wadge Bank (Lazarus et al. 1988) and continues with contemporary reports of Whale Sharks being released from fishing gear often appearing in the media.
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