Dear Marmammers, my co-authors and I are pleased toannounce the following 
publication: When You Get What You Haven’t Paid for: MolecularIdentification of 
“Douradinha” Fish Fillets Can Help End the Illegal Use of River Dolphinsas Bait 
in BrazilHaydée A. Cunha, Vera M. F. da Silva, Teresa E.C. Santos, Stella M. 
Moreira, Nivia A. S. do Carmo andAntonio M. Solé-CavaJournal of Heredity 106: 
565-572 This study provided scientific proofused by the Amazon State prosecutor 
to recommend a ban on the fishing andfraudulent selling of piracatinga as 
“douradinha”, later issued by the BrazilianMinistries of the Environment and 
Fisheries. This measure was considered as afirst, much needed action to end the 
illegal use of river dolphins as bait inBrazil. To learn more about the 
“boto-bait”issue and to help, please visit 
http://www.alertavermelho.org.br/en/. AbstractThe fishery for Calophysus 
macropterus, an Amazonian necrophagous catfish, ishighly detrimental to river 
dolphins and caimans, which are deliberately killedfor use as bait. In the 
Brazilian Amazon, this fishery has increased over thelast decade, in spite of 
the rejection of scavenger fishes by Brazilianconsumers. It was suspected that 
C.macropterus fillets were being sold in Brazilian markets, disguised as 
afictitious fish (the “douradinha”). We collected 62 fillets from “douradinha” 
andother suspiciously named fish from 4 fish-processing plants sold at 6 
marketsin Manaus, in the Brazilian Amazon, and sequenced the cytochrome b gene 
toidentify fillets to species. Sixty percent of fillets labeled “douradinha” 
orwith other deceptive names were actually C.macropterus. Six other fish 
species of low commercial value were alsofound. The presence of dolphin tissue 
in the stomach contents of C. macropterus was confirmed by mtDNAcontrol region 
sequencing. Our results formed the scientific basis for amoratorium on the 
fishing and fraudulent selling of C. macropterus, issued by the Brazilian 
Ministries of theEnvironment and Fisheries. Exposure of this fraud via the mass 
media can helpend the illegal use of dolphins as bait in Brazil. The pdf is 
freely available from the Journal ofHeredity 
site:http://jhered.oxfordjournals.org/content/106/S1/565.full?keytype=ref&ijkey=kPkuf4c2J2RON0S
 Alternatively, pdf requests can be addressed [email protected]. 
Cheers,  Haydée ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Haydée A. Cunha, PhD
MAQUA - Laboratório de Mamíferos Aquáticos e Bioindicadores (UERJ)

Faculdade de Oceanografia 
Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro 
Rua São Francisco Xavier, 524 / Sl. 4002-E
Maracanã, Rio de Janeiro - RJ, Brasil
CEP 20.550-013 
Tel: +55 (21) 2334-0065 / 99981-8382
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