Instituto Multidisciplinario de Investigación y Desarrollo de la Patagonia Norte (IDEPA) CONICET/Universidad Nacional del Comahue, Güemes 1030, 8520, San Antonio Oeste-Río Negro, Argentina
CENPAT Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia Argentina
Centro Nacional Patagónico (CENPAT), CONICET/Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia, San Juan Bosco, Boulevard Brown 2915, 9120 Puerto Madryn-Chubut, Argentina
IDEPA Universidad Nacional del Comahue Argentina
Instituto Multidisciplinario de Investigación y Desarrollo de la Patagonia Norte (IDEPA) CONICET/Universidad Nacional del Comahue, Güemes 1030, 8520, San Antonio Oeste-Río Negro, Argentina
IDEPA Universidad Nacional del Comahue Argentina
Instituto Multidisciplinario de Investigación y Desarrollo de la Patagonia Norte (IDEPA) CONICET/Universidad Nacional del Comahue, Güemes 1030, 8520, San Antonio Oeste-Río Negro, Argentina
CENPAT Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia Argentina
Centro Nacional Patagónico (CENPAT), CONICET/Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia, San Juan Bosco, Boulevard Brown 2915, 9120 Puerto Madryn-Chubut, Argentina
CENPAT Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia Argentina
Centro Nacional Patagónico (CENPAT), CONICET/Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia, San Juan Bosco, Boulevard Brown 2915, 9120 Puerto Madryn-Chubut, Argentina
As world fisheries began to decline and massive collapses were observed, the competition between marine mammals and fisheries became an issue of growing concern. San Matías Gulf (Patagonia, Argentina) is considered to be a fishery ecosystem independent of the Argentine Continental Shelf waters, with particular oceanographic and biological properties. As a semi-enclosed ecosystem, this gulf may generate particular scenarios for interactions between the demersal trawl fishery fleet and the population of South American sea lions Otaria flavescens. In this paper, the diet of the top predator and the composition of fishery catches were characterized in order to assess the trophic overlap between these two components. This analysis and a comparison of the sizes of prey consumed revealed a low probability of competition for similar resources between the fishing fleet and the marine mammals in the San Matías Gulf ecosystem.