A preliminary study on the sea snake bycatches (Serpentes: Hydrophis) across time and space in the Coromandel Coast of southeastern Indiae potential population decline

Authors

  • Ganesh SR Kalinga Foundation, Guddekeri, Agumbe, Shivamogga district – 577 411, Karnataka, India
  • Nikita Jukenti National Centre for Sustainable Coastal Management (NSCSM), Anna University Campus, Chennai – 600025, Tamil Nadu, India
  • Joselin Blessy Dept. of Ecology & Environment, Pondicherry University, Kalapet, Puducherry – 605 014, India
  • Duraisamy Ramamoorthy Dept. of Ecology & Environment, Pondicherry University, Kalapet, Puducherry – 605 014, India
  • Ebai Chinnathambi Dept. of Zoology, Presidency College, No. 100, Kamarajar Salai, Chepauk, Chennai – 600 005, Tamil Nadu, India
  • Evangelin Dept. of Zoology, Presidency College, No. 100, Kamarajar Salai, Chepauk, Chennai – 600 005, Tamil Nadu, India
  • P. Revathi Dept. of Zoology, Presidency College, No. 100, Kamarajar Salai, Chepauk, Chennai – 600 005, Tamil Nadu, India
  • J. Vikram Dept. of Zoology, Presidency College, No. 100, Kamarajar Salai, Chepauk, Chennai – 600 005, Tamil Nadu, India
  • Deepak Samuel National Centre for Sustainable Coastal Management (NSCSM), Anna University Campus, Chennai – 600025, Tamil Nadu, India

Keywords:

Chennai, entanglement, fishing ban, mortality, non-target species, Puducherry

Abstract

We examined the dynamics of sea snake bycatches in two locations in the Coromandel Coast of southeastern India, namely, Chennai and Puducherry, with an emphasis on two variables — time and space. For the time variable, we conducted multiple surveys in Chennai for both long (3650 days apart, 2009–10 vs. 2019–20) and short (45 days, May–June 2024) timelines. For the space variable, we surveyed a relatively lower intensity fishing site of Puducherry (150 km south; January–April 2023). We recorded a total of 98 bycatches representing nine snake species, over a period of 189 days. Rate of snake bycatches per day saw a reduction in long-term timeline: 33/49 days (67.3% in 2009–10) vs. 22/40 days (55% in 2019–20), in short-term timeline: 16/39 days (41% in fishing ban period) and in space: 27/61 days (44.2%). Number of snake mortalities was relatively similar everywhere: 14/33 snakes (42.4% in 2009–10), 10/22 snakes (45.4% in 2019–20) in Chennai, 11/27 snakes (40.7% January–April 2023) in Puducherry, except during the fishing ban period: 5/16 snakes (31.2% May–June 2024). Bycatch rates with respect to various types of fishing gears and vessels are major avenues for future improvements. This preliminary study warrants much more detailed investigations to find out the bycatch frequencies and mortality rates of sea snakes in the Coromandel Coast.           

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Published

2026-02-18