# Fisheries ecological knowledge, FEK: Contribution to the knowledge of the ecology and distribution of houndsharks and dogfish shark (family Triakidae and Squalidae) in the Canary Islands

**Authors:** Rosario Luque Cabrera, Ana Espino-Ruano, José Juan Castro, Airam Guerra-Marrero, Lorena Couce-Montero, Raibel Núñez-González, Tomàs Bañeras, David Jiménez-Alvarado

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0344910 · 2026-03-18

## TL;DR

This study explores the ecology and fishing patterns of houndsharks and dogfish sharks in the Canary Islands using interviews with local fishers.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the distribution, fishing practices, and conservation needs of under-researched houndshark and dogfish shark species in the Canary Islands.

## Key findings

- Common smoothhound, tope shark, and shortnose spurdog are frequently caught but often not distinguished by fishers.
- Houndsharks and dogfish sharks are mainly caught in summer, likely due to mating aggregations in shallow waters.
- Most catches are discarded, and these species are not targeted by artisanal fisheries in the Canary Islands.

## Abstract

Currently, it is assumed that most of elasmobranchs (sharks, rays and skates) had suffered a high depletion in their populations worldwide, but there is an important lack of biological and fishing information over the bulk of the species that do not permit to determine the real status of their populations. Seven of these scarce information species are the houndsharks and dogfish shark (family Triakidae and Squalidae) found in the Canary Islands, which actual status level and contribution to the catch in the archipelago are still unknown. 136 interviews were carried out among artisanal fishers from all the islands, in which very few of them were able to distinguish all the species. Two houndshark and one dogfish shark species were frequently identified and/or caught (the common smoothhound (Mustelus mustelus), the tope shark (Galeorhinus galeus), and the shortnose spurdog (Squalus megalops)), and half of the fishers were not able to distinguish the sex of these fishes. The houndsharks and dogfish shark are preferentially distributed down to 200 metres depth, with higher catches off the eastern and central islands. These sharks are caught all year round with highest peaks during the summer months, probably coinciding with aggregations for mating and reproduction in shallower waters. Houndsharks and dogfish shark are generally not targeted by artisanal fisheries and, although sometimes landed, most of the catch is usually discarded. Sharks caught range from 100 to 120 cm in total length for common smoothhound and tope sharks, while the catch size for shortnose spurdog varies between 50 and 60 cm in total length. Improving taxonomic knowledge within the fishing sector is essential for sustainable management and conservation of houndshark and dogfish shark species in Canarian waters.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Mustelus mustelus (taxon 112230), Galeorhinus galeus (taxon 86063), Squalus megalops (taxon 335062)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** S. acanthias (MESH:D018455)
- **Chemicals:** Catch (-)
- **Species:** Gymnura altavela (spiny butterfly ray, species) [taxon 558707], Spondyliosoma cantharus (black seabream, species) [taxon 50595], Squalidae (dogfish sharks, family) [taxon 30511], Triakidae (houndsharks, family) [taxon 7839], Mustelus asterias (starry smooth-hound, species) [taxon 112232], Rajiformes (skates, order) [taxon 7858], Elasmobranchii (elasmobranchs, subclass) [taxon 7778], Squatina squatina (angelshark, species) [taxon 263718], Squalus blainville (longnose spurdog, species) [taxon 934694], Galeorhinus galeus (tope shark, species) [taxon 86063], Selachii (sharks, infraclass) [taxon 119203], Squalus acanthias (spiny dogfish, species) [taxon 7797], Pagrus pagrus (common sea bream, species) [taxon 8173], Squalus megalops (species) [taxon 335062], Mustelus punctulatus (blackspotted smooth-hound, species) [taxon 112233], Mustelus mustelus (smooth-hound, species) [taxon 112230], Acanthopagrus schlegelii (black porgy, species) [taxon 72011], Pekania pennanti (fisher, species) [taxon 76720]

## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12998843/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12998843